The Design, Installation and Commissioning of an Absorption Refrigeration System at Gwalia Gold Mine in Western Australia

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
A Broodryk J deVries P Kyselica K McLean
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
7
File Size:
445 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 31, 2015

Abstract

Gwalia gold mine is located close to the town of Leonora in the Goldfields region of Western Australia, some 830 km from Perth. The mine is wholly owned by St Barbara Ltd, an Australian Securities Exchange listed gold producer and explorer. The Gwalia mine is a deep, all-trucking mine and is serviced by a 10 km long decline from surface. Mining is currently 1540 m below surface. Reserves extend to 1820 m below surface and are open at depth. The mine produces in excess of 200 koz of gold per annum.The Leonora area is hot and arid, with a mean annual rainfall of 230 mm and a 95 per cent mean daily maximum temperature of 20.3°C wet-bulb and 35.6°C dry-bulb.The primary ventilation system comprises a 490 kg/s surface exhaust fan, which draws air down a parallel intake system consisting of the decline, and a dedicated fresh-air intake system extending to the bottom of the production zone. Cooling is provided via a surface bulk air cooler serviced by an ammonia refrigeration plant that delivers 150 kg/s of chilled water to the bulk air cooler.The refrigeration plant and bulk air cooler were installed in 2008. The design allows cooling to be increased over time by installing an additional refrigeration plant in a lead lag configuration with the current refrigeration plant when required.Since 2008, expansion and increased depth reached a point where the underground heat load exceeded the installed capacity of the existing 4.0 megawatt rated (MWR) refrigeration plant. In order to maintain the mine design conditions underground, upgrading of the existing refrigeration system was required to bring the cooling capacity to 7.5 MWR.Two expansion options were considered: the addition of an ammonia vapour-compression refrigeration machine similar to the existing one or a lithium bromide absorption refrigeration system using waste heat from the site power station. The original design and layout of equipment on-site meant that either could be used, allowing an assessment of the merits of both when additional cooling was required.The decision was made to install a lithium bromide absorption system on the lead side of the existing ammonia refrigeration plant. This arrangement provides considerable economic benefits, including reductions in site-generated electrical power, generator fuel consumption and carbon dioxide emissions.This paper details the planning, design, installation and commissioning of the absorption chillers.CITATION:Broodryk, A, deVries, J, Kyselica, P and McLean, K, 2015. The design, installation and commissioning of an absorption refrigeration system at Gwalia gold mine in Western Australia, in Proceedings The Australian Mine Ventilation Conference, pp 193–200 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation

APA: A Broodryk J deVries P Kyselica K McLean  (2015)  The Design, Installation and Commissioning of an Absorption Refrigeration System at Gwalia Gold Mine in Western Australia

MLA: A Broodryk J deVries P Kyselica K McLean The Design, Installation and Commissioning of an Absorption Refrigeration System at Gwalia Gold Mine in Western Australia. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2015.

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