RI 7206 Field Investigation And Testing Of A Minnesota Clay Resource For Iron Ore Pellet Bonding

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
James H. Aase
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
20
File Size:
1224 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

Selected glacial lake clay deposits in Minnesota were sampled, tested, and evaluated to determine their suitability for use as a bonding agent in iron ore pellet manufacturing. Preliminary tests conducted on clay samples obtained from five ancient glacial lake basins identified the clays in the Lake Agassiz glacial lake basin near Cook, Minn., as having the greatest bonding potential. An auger drilling program was conducted to obtain substantial quantities of representative material for detailed testing. The drilling indicated the presence of large clay reserves in excess of 500 million tons within the 12-square-mile area investigated. Bench scale tests indicated that the bonding properties of Cook area clays, when activated with relatively small quantities of sodium carbonate monohydrate (Na2C03?H2O), imparted excellent strength characteristics to iron ore pellets. Larger scale continuous pelletizing tests were made to confirm the bench scale results. These tests indicated that use of 1 percent activated clay alone as binder gave the iron ore pellets an overall strength slightly lower than with 0.75 percent bentonite, considered the industry standard. Use of 0.5 percent activated clay plus 0.5 percent bentonite produced better pellet strength qualities than use of 0.75 percent bentonite alone, without increasing the silica plus alumina content. The data from both bench scale and larger scale continuous tests suggest that the Cook, Minn., clays can be utilized after activation either alone or in combination with bentonite at an economic advantage over present pelletizing practice with bentonite.
Citation

APA: James H. Aase  (1968)  RI 7206 Field Investigation And Testing Of A Minnesota Clay Resource For Iron Ore Pellet Bonding

MLA: James H. Aase RI 7206 Field Investigation And Testing Of A Minnesota Clay Resource For Iron Ore Pellet Bonding. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1968.

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