- Title
- Recovery and cleaning of fine hydrophobic particles using the Reflux™ Flotation Cell
- Creator
- Cole, M. J.; Dickinson, J. E.; Galvin, K. P.
- Relation
- Separation and Purification Technology Vol. 240, Issue I June 2021, no. 116641
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.seppur.2020.116641
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2020
- Description
- The Reflux Flotation Cell (RFC) consists of a vertical vessel located above a series of parallel inclined channels. This novel system, which is the inverse of an existing gravity separation system known as the Reflux Classifier, provides a powerful mechanism for enhancing bubble-liquid segregation. The usual link between the imposed gas flux and water recovery in the froth product is decoupled through this mechanism, resulting in the establishment of a concentrated bubbly zone throughout the upper section of the cell, and no froth zone. A downwards fluidization arrangement promotes strong washing of the flotation product, to remove the hydrophilic slimes from the hydrophobic concentrate. The mechanism also provides for strong control of the bias flux, allowing a significant positive bias flux to be established. A feed suspension of fine coal tailings containing hydrophobic coal and hydrophilic mineral matter was subjected to the novel flotation, providing an ideal basis for studying the interplay between the hydrophobic particle recovery, inferred by the combustible recovery, and the product grade, inferred by the mineral matter content of the product, expressed by the ash %. The feed ash % was about 43 wt%. The product cleaning was compared to firstly, the results from the tree flotation method, and secondly, a newer method known as Coal Grain Analysis (CGA). The RFC results were found to lie to the left of the tree curve, converging to the limit described by the CGA analysis. This work suggests the RFC and CGA provide a form of mutual validation on the limits of cleaning, though more work will be needed to confirm this finding. The RFC was operated with a volumetric feed flux of the order 1 cm/s, a rate comparable to that of conventional flotation systems, with the bias flux ranging from 0.0 cm/s to 1.9 cm/s. For a fixed gas flux of 1.1 cm/s, increases in the liquid bias flux from 0.0 cm/s to 1.0 cm/s resulted in a decrease in product ash from 18.2% to 7.8%, and a reduction in combustible recovery from the order 87% to 75.6%. Operating at the lowest gas flux of 0.6 cm/s, and the strongest bias flux of 1.9 cm/s yielded a low product ash of 6.7% at the reduced combustible recovery of 64%.
- Subject
- desliming flotation; ffne particle flotation; inclined channels; Reflux flotation cell; fluidization
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1425003
- Identifier
- uon:38185
- Identifier
- ISSN:1383-5866
- Rights
- © 2020. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
- Language
- eng
- Full Text
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