Flotation Microscopy Of Some Cuban Manganese Ores (d0aebc69-7678-4563-9cd7-d35652b139d3)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
A. M. Gaudin H. Rush Spedden
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
16
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1748 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1942

Abstract

IN the belief that a critical study of its operating problems might be a sound investment, the Cuban American Manganese Corporation initiated an ore-treatment research in cooperation with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. One of the early objectives of this research naturally became the relationship of the microscopy of the Cuban ores of the Corporation to their flotation treatment. The operations in Cuba have already been described by F. S. Norcross, Jr.7 and the laboratory study of manganese oxide flotation goes back a number of years .4 Broadly speaking, the difficulties encountered in the flotation of manganese ores are that the consumption of reagents is extremely high, the concentrate contains more silica than is desirable and the tailing losses are relatively high. An appreciable betterment on any of these scores would achieve a definite betterment in costs, quantity of minable ores, and quality of product. The microscope study discussed in this paper was made on samples from the Quinto mine, from the Ponupo mine, and from mill products at various stages of passage of the ore through the mill. The writers have had access to Company records and in particular to the petro¬graphic studies made on thin sections of ore by the late Professors R. J. Colony and Philip Krieger, of Columbia University. They acknowledge their debt to both of these men for the help derived from the reports. Manganese oxides are black, friable, smudging. It is, therefore, very difficult to judge operations by inspection. The mineralogy of manganese compounds seems to be confused, and the authors believe that many more minerals have been described than actually exist. Much of this difficulty is due to the prevalence of the structural conditions that will be discussed further in this paper; namely, the porosity and the friability of the ores, and the extremely intimate association of minute manganiferous mineral crystals with impurities of various sorts. By all odds the most important manganese mineral in Cuba is the one that in this paper is called "psilomelane." The name "psilomelane" has been used in so many different ways that the choice of it for this ore may not be approved by all. However, it seems to be the best under the circumstances. This mineral accounts for about 97 per cent of the manganese in the ores of the Quinto and Ponupo mines and in the mill feed. The remaining odd 3 per cent consists mostly of pyrolusite together with minor amounts of other manganese oxide minerals. DESCRIPTION OF PSILOMELANE Aggregate Structure In grains or lumps, psilomelane has a characteristic fibrous appearance and seems
Citation

APA: A. M. Gaudin H. Rush Spedden  (1942)  Flotation Microscopy Of Some Cuban Manganese Ores (d0aebc69-7678-4563-9cd7-d35652b139d3)

MLA: A. M. Gaudin H. Rush Spedden Flotation Microscopy Of Some Cuban Manganese Ores (d0aebc69-7678-4563-9cd7-d35652b139d3). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1942.

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