Principles Of Flotation, IX-Influence Of The Anion On Air-Mineral Contact In Presence Of Collectors Of Xanthate Type And Its Consequent Influence On Differential Flotation

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Ian Wark
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
23
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1006 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

IT has been shown1 that in the absence of heavy metal salts, the nature of the alkali used to promote differential flotation-whether caustic soda, lime or sodium carbonate-is unimportant. The hydroxyl ion is the active depressant upon which differentiation depends, and the pH value determines whether a film of collector forms on any given mineral surface. Even when sodium cyanide is used in conjunction with alkalies, it is the pH value and not the nature of the alkali or its concentration that is important, for upon the pH value alone depends the fraction of the added sodium cyanide that is present as cyanide ion, which is the true depressant. When heavy metal salts become dissolved from partly oxidized ores, or are added intentionally as activators, conditions are different, and metallurgists have found that lime and sodium carbonate do not give identical results, even when added in amounts sufficient to produce the same pH value. In the few instances in which we had attempted to confirm this view, we had failed to do so, for, with nothing to guide us, we had inadvertently chosen solutions that gave contact curves of a "stand-ard type," which correspond to conditions of ready floatability. Now, however, we find that, in the presence of copper salts, and within a restricted range of reagent concentrations, the nature of the anions present is important, and that sodium carbonate does influence the results, apart from the usual effect due to its influence on pH value. With the recognition of this anion effect, and with the control of temperature already introduced,' it appears that the factors of major importance in connection with this set of reagents have been taken into consideration, and that the results obtained and the conclusions drawn from contact tests will be of more immediate value to the operator.
Citation

APA: Ian Wark  (1939)  Principles Of Flotation, IX-Influence Of The Anion On Air-Mineral Contact In Presence Of Collectors Of Xanthate Type And Its Consequent Influence On Differential Flotation

MLA: Ian Wark Principles Of Flotation, IX-Influence Of The Anion On Air-Mineral Contact In Presence Of Collectors Of Xanthate Type And Its Consequent Influence On Differential Flotation. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1939.

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