Making money from wastes: a custom circuit within Clarabelle Mill

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Alain Bouchard Germain Labonté Jim Barrett
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
15
File Size:
2313 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2002

Abstract

"Mill feed materials that are not run-of-mine ore are often a challenge for mineral processors and tend to accumulate in stockpiles, where they remain unprocessed for many years and become “slow moving inventories”. During a complete re-evaluation of the Clarabelle Mill operation (38,000 ton/day capacity) in 2000, it was concluded that there was an opportunity to assemble a 5,000 ton/day custom circuit to treat such stockpiles in the equipment that remained available during regularly scheduled maintenance shut-downs.This project was part of the larger Mill Redesign Project and involved testing the intended flowsheet under a number of operating scenarios for the first material to be treated: spent refractory bricks. The laboratory focus was on how to maximize returns using the available equipment and reagents.The circuit was successfully commissioned in the fall of 2000. As the brick stockpile was depleted, other potential feeds were evaluated at the laboratory, as well as in the new custom circuit itself. Processing of the spent refractory brick has yielded a significant contribution to the profitability of INCO. Significant opportunities lie ahead for generating more value from other slow moving inventories.INTRODUCTIONIntegrated mining operations tend to have slow moving inventories along the path from the mines to the finished products. Spent refractory bricks from furnaces and converters and furnace bottoms are materials that often end up in long-tern stockpiles. Such stockpiles are a challenge, although they represent small tonnages on an annual basis, because they are unique materials, which cannot be readily brought into the process at a rate anywhere near that at which they are produced, due to the high contents of deleterious components such as chromite or magnesia. Accumulation over years will eventually yield a metal inventory worthy of consideration given the right opportunity, such as availability of spare equipment or peak metal prices."
Citation

APA: Alain Bouchard Germain Labonté Jim Barrett  (2002)  Making money from wastes: a custom circuit within Clarabelle Mill

MLA: Alain Bouchard Germain Labonté Jim Barrett Making money from wastes: a custom circuit within Clarabelle Mill. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2002.

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