Coal - Design and Operation of Thickening Equipment for Closed-Water Circuits in Coal Preparation Plants

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
L. A. Dale D. A. Dahlstrom
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
File Size:
519 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1965

Abstract

Closed-water circuits are justified today from two standpoints: economical operation and prevention of stream pollution. In today's modern preparation plant, it has been found very desirable to have the plant circulating water maintained at a relatively low solids concentration of around 3%. In so doing, bene-ficiation equipment can operate at a much higher efficiency. However, makeup water requirements would become excessive if the fines were to be removed from the preparation plant by bleeding a 3% solids concentration to a tailings pond. With the ever increasing percentage of —200 mesh coal, clay and slimes in the raw coal, coupled with the creation of these fines within the preparation plant, the need for water conservation for economy reasons becomes even more important. Because of stream pollution laws, tailings ponds have become very costly to operate and maintain, resulting in the necessity of employing an in-plant method of water recovery. Accordingly, the primary system employed in water recovery in the coal preparation plant today consists of a solids concentration device to thicken refuse solids while at the same time producing a sufficiently clarified effluent that can go back to the preparation plant for water reuse. The thickened product is then normally passed to a dewatering device that will produce a handleable solid that can be disposed of
Citation

APA: L. A. Dale D. A. Dahlstrom  (1965)  Coal - Design and Operation of Thickening Equipment for Closed-Water Circuits in Coal Preparation Plants

MLA: L. A. Dale D. A. Dahlstrom Coal - Design and Operation of Thickening Equipment for Closed-Water Circuits in Coal Preparation Plants. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1965.

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