Mount Isa Mines Copper Concentrator - An Insight into Current and Historical Practice

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
W Y. Lui P Radulovic
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
22
File Size:
1429 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 15, 2013

Abstract

The Mount Isa Mines (MIM) copper concentrator at Mount Isa processes both chalcopyrite ore from the MIM underground mine and rotary holding furnace (RHF) slag from the MIM copper smelter. There have been numerous changes to the processing practices since commissioning this concentrator in 1973. Current management of the concentrator extends from grinding and flotation to concentrate handling (thickening and filtration) and tailings disposal (fill plants, tailings thickeners and process water systems).Predominant mill feed through the concentrator is chalcopyrite ore. RHF slag is processed when concentrator production exceeds mined ore production. The chalcopyrite circuit has two stages of grinding in parallel lines (Line 1 and Line 2). Each line has parallel preflotation and rougher banks, combining into a common scavenger/retreat circuit (including regrinding) and common cleaner circuit. RHF slag may be milled in parallel with chalcopyrite, utilising Line 2 flotation roughers and a Jameson cell cleaner. All final concentrate produced is combined and pumped to the concentrate handling plant. The concentrate is thickened, pre-fluxed and filtered in hyperbaric disc filters. Fluxing specification is set by the copper smelter, and filtered product transferred via conveyor belt to the smelter concentrate storage facility.Wet fill and paste fill plants utilise flotation final tailings as hydraulic or cemented hydraulic fill for stopes underground. Cement ratios and fill plant utilisation are varied depending on underground stope fill requirements. Tailings from the adjacent lead-zinc concentrator are also processed at wet fill. All tailings that are not utilised for backfill are pumped via wet fill to three parallel tailings thickeners. Thickener underflows are gravity fed to the tailings dams with thickener overflows recycled for site process water use. In addition to summarising historical operations, this paper will provide a detailed outline of more recent changes in the concentrator flotation circuit, equipment upgrades, reagent optimisation as well as product and process optimisation at the final concentrate handling and fill plants.CITATION:Lui, W Y and Radulovic, P, 2013. Mount Isa Mines copper concentrator - An insight into current and historical practice, in Proceedings MetPlant 2013 , pp 553-574 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation

APA: W Y. Lui P Radulovic  (2013)  Mount Isa Mines Copper Concentrator - An Insight into Current and Historical Practice

MLA: W Y. Lui P Radulovic Mount Isa Mines Copper Concentrator - An Insight into Current and Historical Practice. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2013.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

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