Moly-Cop Tools Applications for the Assessment of Grinding Media Performance at Full Industrial Scale

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. Morrow J. E. Sepulveda
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
749 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2014

Abstract

"The Linear Wear Theory provides a reliable framework for the assessment of grinding media performance at full scale. This theory can be applied for analyzing grinding media consumption rates in any given grinding operation as well as the evaluation of alternative grinding media products, based on actual operational data, correcting for conditions like ore hardness, feed and product sizes, mill power and circuit throughput; all of them unrelated to the grinding media intrinsic quality attributes. A series of Moly-Cop Tools 3.0 applications have been developed to facilitate the calculations involved. Moly-Cop Tools 3.0 is available, free of charge, to all interested parties through the corresponding author.INTRODUCTION Mineral grinding circuit operators recognize the significance of grinding media (balls) consumption on the cost structure of any full scale grinding facility. The effective cost associated with this essential consumable depends on two factors: delivered price and durability (quality) of the grinding media. When evaluating alternative grinding media varieties, there is a well accepted evaluation criterion by which a given media type is considered to be “cost-effective” when its unit application cost – normally expressed in $/ton of ore ground – is shown to be lower than that of a nominal reference condition: Grinding Media Cost = Ball Price x Ball Consumption (1) ($ /ton ground) ($/ton balls) (ton balls/ton ground) Under this criterion, an alternative, higher-price grinding media product could be “cost-effective” if its associated consumption rate is sufficiently lower than the reference media, enough to yield a lower grinding cost, as dictated by Equation 1. For the proper application of the above criterion, evaluators must rely on representative indicators of grinding media quality, ideally independent of most mill operating conditions. In each particular case, ball price is always a known component; however, it is not so evident how media performance (quality) differences amongst alternative product types could be assessed with a reasonable degree of accuracy and precision."
Citation

APA: R. Morrow J. E. Sepulveda  (2014)  Moly-Cop Tools Applications for the Assessment of Grinding Media Performance at Full Industrial Scale

MLA: R. Morrow J. E. Sepulveda Moly-Cop Tools Applications for the Assessment of Grinding Media Performance at Full Industrial Scale. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2014.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account