RI 2618 Hindered Settling Classification in relation to Table Concentration of Idaho Lead-Zinc Ores

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 710 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 1, 1924
Abstract
"About two years ago the Bureau of Mines, Department of the Interior, and the University of Idaho undertook an investigation of classification in its relation to table concentration of Idaho ores. The cooperation of the management of the Bunker Hill & Sullivan Co. in placing at our disposal their West Mill and facilities as desired, offered an unusual opportunity for studying the field of hindered classification in its practical and economic relation to table concentration.It has been shorn theoretically, and demonstrated experimentally, that ore products are more easily and economically concentrated on tables if the natural feed, consisting of various minerals and of all sizes of particles of each mineral, be classified or grouped into a series of products in which the mineral particles of greatest density are small in diameter relative to the diameter of the mineral particles of lesser density. Products in which the maximum difference in diameter of light and heavy minerals occurs are to be obtained only by true hindered settling classification. To our knowledge there has never been a really good hindered settling classifier used in practice and the present tendency seems to be to by-pass any attempt at such classification.After a careful study of the nature of hindered classification and of the requirements for hindered settling in practice, a classifier has been developed that takes fullest practical advantage of the widely known, but generally only meagerly understood, condition of hindered settling so well analyzed a number of years ago by Dr. Richards.The present paper presents briefly some of the more important practical results accruing through the investigation."
Citation
APA:
(1924) RI 2618 Hindered Settling Classification in relation to Table Concentration of Idaho Lead-Zinc OresMLA: RI 2618 Hindered Settling Classification in relation to Table Concentration of Idaho Lead-Zinc Ores. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1924.