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A study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore

Kansanshi copper mine is situated in the north western province of Zambia. Weathering has given rise to a vertically zoned profile comprising leached, refractory, oxide, mixed and hypogene sulphide mineralisation. As a result of the mineral variations, the processing plant treats three distinct ore...

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Main Author: Kalichini, Monica Shamvuse
Other Authors: Corin, Kirsten
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Chemical Engineering 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kalichini, Monica Shamvuse
author2 Corin, Kirsten
author_browse Corin, Kirsten
Kalichini, Monica Shamvuse
author_facet Corin, Kirsten
Kalichini, Monica Shamvuse
author_sort Kalichini, Monica Shamvuse
collection Thesis
description Kansanshi copper mine is situated in the north western province of Zambia. Weathering has given rise to a vertically zoned profile comprising leached, refractory, oxide, mixed and hypogene sulphide mineralisation. As a result of the mineral variations, the processing plant treats three distinct ore types; oxide, sulphide and mixed. The objective of this study was to investigate the floatability of a complex Kansanshi mixed copper ore comprising sulphide and oxide minerals with a view to achieving an optimal flotation performance in the treatment of the Kansanshi ore body. This required an in-depth analysis of the mineralogy of the feed as well as tailings samples after different flotation processes involving a range of reagent types and dosage procedures. The ore samples studied represented a high quality (HQ) ore dominated by sulphide minerals and low quality (LQ) ore dominated by oxide minerals. The quality of an ore at Kansanshi is defined by the acid soluble copper (ASCu) content of the ore, which is used as a proxy for oxide mineral content. An important finding in this study was that sulphide minerals are also prone to digestion during this analysis. Chalcopyrite was the major copper mineral in the HQ ore, constituting 3.9 %, but only 1.0 % of the LQ ore. LQ ore was dominated by chrysocolla, which constituted 3.8 % of the ore. The treatment of HQ ore with 30 g/t SIBX has shown that up to 90 % of the copper can be recovered from HQ ore. On the other hand, while 30 g/t SIBX was sufficient for chalcopyrite recovery in LQ ore, the tailings mineralogy after flotation with SIBX indicated that 78.8 % of the unrecovered copper in LQ ore was present as chrysocolla, 1.3 % as malachite and 5.8 % as chalcopyrite and therefore LQ ore required alternative flotation methods for the recovery of the oxide minerals. Comparison of slug sulphidisation and controlled potential sulphidisation (CPS) of LQ ore have shown that CPS performs better than slug sulphidisation only when the correct potential range and SIBX dosage after sulphdisation are used. Tailings mineralogy of LQ ore after sulphidisation showed a copper deportment of 0.1 % cuprite, 0.6 % malachite, 0.8 % chalcopyrite and 84.8 % chrysocolla, suggesting that all oxide copper minerals present in the LQ ore, except chrysocolla, are amenable to flotation using SIBX after sulphidisation. This observation was further verified through sulphidisation in a microflotation cell, which showed malachite recovery of 18.2 % compared to only 0.5 % of the chrysocolla. A techno-economic analysis comparing slug sulphidisation and CPS has indicated that CPS using a potential range of -300 to -400 mV performs better than slug sulphidisation from an economic stand point. At this potential, a NaHS:SIBX ratio of 7:1 was required, further highlighting the importance of using the correct collector dosage after sulphidisation.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/16196
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:33.381Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Department of Chemical Engineering
publisherStr Department of Chemical Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/16196 A study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore Kalichini, Monica Shamvuse Corin, Kirsten O'Connor, Cyril Chemical Engineering Kansanshi copper mine is situated in the north western province of Zambia. Weathering has given rise to a vertically zoned profile comprising leached, refractory, oxide, mixed and hypogene sulphide mineralisation. As a result of the mineral variations, the processing plant treats three distinct ore types; oxide, sulphide and mixed. The objective of this study was to investigate the floatability of a complex Kansanshi mixed copper ore comprising sulphide and oxide minerals with a view to achieving an optimal flotation performance in the treatment of the Kansanshi ore body. This required an in-depth analysis of the mineralogy of the feed as well as tailings samples after different flotation processes involving a range of reagent types and dosage procedures. The ore samples studied represented a high quality (HQ) ore dominated by sulphide minerals and low quality (LQ) ore dominated by oxide minerals. The quality of an ore at Kansanshi is defined by the acid soluble copper (ASCu) content of the ore, which is used as a proxy for oxide mineral content. An important finding in this study was that sulphide minerals are also prone to digestion during this analysis. Chalcopyrite was the major copper mineral in the HQ ore, constituting 3.9 %, but only 1.0 % of the LQ ore. LQ ore was dominated by chrysocolla, which constituted 3.8 % of the ore. The treatment of HQ ore with 30 g/t SIBX has shown that up to 90 % of the copper can be recovered from HQ ore. On the other hand, while 30 g/t SIBX was sufficient for chalcopyrite recovery in LQ ore, the tailings mineralogy after flotation with SIBX indicated that 78.8 % of the unrecovered copper in LQ ore was present as chrysocolla, 1.3 % as malachite and 5.8 % as chalcopyrite and therefore LQ ore required alternative flotation methods for the recovery of the oxide minerals. Comparison of slug sulphidisation and controlled potential sulphidisation (CPS) of LQ ore have shown that CPS performs better than slug sulphidisation only when the correct potential range and SIBX dosage after sulphdisation are used. Tailings mineralogy of LQ ore after sulphidisation showed a copper deportment of 0.1 % cuprite, 0.6 % malachite, 0.8 % chalcopyrite and 84.8 % chrysocolla, suggesting that all oxide copper minerals present in the LQ ore, except chrysocolla, are amenable to flotation using SIBX after sulphidisation. This observation was further verified through sulphidisation in a microflotation cell, which showed malachite recovery of 18.2 % compared to only 0.5 % of the chrysocolla. A techno-economic analysis comparing slug sulphidisation and CPS has indicated that CPS using a potential range of -300 to -400 mV performs better than slug sulphidisation from an economic stand point. At this potential, a NaHS:SIBX ratio of 7:1 was required, further highlighting the importance of using the correct collector dosage after sulphidisation. 2016-01-02T05:18:57Z 2016-01-02T05:18:57Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Eng) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16196 eng application/pdf Department of Chemical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Chemical Engineering
Kalichini, Monica Shamvuse
A study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore
title_full A study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore
title_fullStr A study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore
title_full_unstemmed A study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore
title_short A study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore
title_sort study of the flotation characteristics of a complex copper ore
topic Chemical Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16196
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AT kalichinimonicashamvuse studyoftheflotationcharacteristicsofacomplexcopperore