Sampling Systems for Process Control and Metallurgical Accounting

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
F F. Pitard
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
8
File Size:
296 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 29, 2014

Abstract

The optimisation of a metallurgical plant requires two kinds of sampling systems. The first provides samples to follow process changes, so in due time actions to maintain key parameters within pre-established specifications can be applied. The second provides composite samples at the end of a working shift to demonstrate that valuable constituents sent to the plant went to either a final concentrate or to the tailings in a logical, expected proportion. Contrary to what many experts may claim, these two kinds of sampling requirements are incompatible and cannot be fulfilled using the same sampling systems; this is because the required samples have completely different objectives. A process control sample is an instantaneous sample with increments taken at short intervals, and the objective is to know where the process is at any given time. Excellent accuracy is not a must, however good precision is recommended since a possible process correction may need to be made. Online analysers fed with in-stream stationary cutters or other kinds of in-stream or by-stream probes can do well for such a mission. A composite sample for metallurgical accounting with increments collected over a long period of time, for which excellent accuracy and good precision are both required, must be generated by sophisticated and extremely well-maintained cross-stream sampling stations. The use of process control sampling systems to achieve good metallurgical accounting has been promoted by several manufacturers of sampling equipment around the world; it is a grave mistake that is misleading top management and a practice that should be scrutinised and preferably eliminated. Furthermore, bias tests used to prove otherwise are often based on insufficient data to draw valid conclusions; a guideline is provided.CITATION:Pitard, F F, 2014. Sampling systems for process control and metallurgical accounting, in Proceedings Sampling 2014 , pp 25–32 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation

APA: F F. Pitard  (2014)  Sampling Systems for Process Control and Metallurgical Accounting

MLA: F F. Pitard Sampling Systems for Process Control and Metallurgical Accounting. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2014.

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