This invention relates to the field of using magnets to remove ferro-magnetic material from a flow or slurry, for example the recovery of magnetite.
As one example of the ferro-magnetic materials this specification is directed to, magnetite is a highly magnetic gray-black mineral which consists of an oxide of iron and is an important form of iron ore. This naturally occurring rock mineral is mined and procured by many industrial mineral processors and utilized in the processing of certain products such as coal, potash, iron, diamonds, etc.; this is often referred to as heavy media separation. Magnetite is also one of the four main types of iron ore which iron is produced from. Magnetite may also be contained in so-called para-magnetics; for example, when combined in rock having non-ferrous elements such as quartz. As used herein the word magnetite is intended to include both pure magnetite and para-magnetics which include magnetite.
Magnetite is extracted from slurries in processing circuits, including the iron ore industry by the means of a permanent magnetic drum separation systems. These separators consist of a magnet array affixed to an axle. This axle/magnet arc assembly (˜120 degrees) is housed within a non-ferrous drum, such as stainless steel, having sealed endplates. The drum assembly is mounted in a tank. The tank consists of an inlet, non-ferrous outlet and ferrous discharge point, The stationary magnetic arc within the enclosed stainless steel drum is positioned typically at the bottom of the drum assembly so as the slurry will pass into and through the magnetic field. The clearance between the tank and the drum is relatively narrow, for example within the range of ¾ inch to two inches clearance, to ensure the slurry is exposed to the magnetic field for magnetite extraction. Once the magnetic material is captured, the rotating drum conveys the retained magnetite up and around to the magnetite discharge point.
This extraction method offers a number of challenges to the processing facility in that oversize product (larger debris) will get past broken or deteriorated screens, and get pinched or trapped in the small clearance between the drum and tank. This can lead to dents that damage and break apart the brittle internal magnet core. The broken internal magnetic core is rendered ineffective and allows magnetite to pass through the system, discharging into the non-ferrous outlet creating losses. The lost magnetite has to be replaced with new magnetite adding to operating costs of the processing facility.
Trapped over-sized solids can also abrade the shell leading to holes in the drum allowing magnetite and slurry to fill the drum. The seals on the endplate are subject to wear and failure, allowing the drum to fill up with slurry. Once the drum fills up with the slurry the drum becomes extremely heavy creating handling and safety issues. Most facilities' crane capacities are unable to handle the extra weight in removing the flooded drum for repair.
It is thus desirable to recover ferro-magnetic material such as magnetite from a slurry containing solids while avoiding or mitigating the effect of the problems in the prior art.
In the prior art, Applicant is aware of U.S. Pat. No. 5,975,310, entitled Method and Apparatus for Ball Separation, which issued to Darling et al on Nov. 2, 1999. In that specification, incorporated herein in its entirety, the problem of ball wear, degradation, and fracturing resulting in steel splinters is addressed by using an arcuate magnet. The arcuate magnet is made up of a series of magnets that are supported adjacent the outer periphery of the cylindrical blind trommel. The blind trommel is rotated. Steel balls and magnetic material are held to the inner periphery of the blind trommel and carried with it to the end of the arcuate magnet. The arcuate magnet may be made up of either electromagnets or permanent magnets. Another embodiment has one or more magnets attached to spaced positions around the outer periphery of the trommel. Permanent or electromagnets may be employed. Electromagnets are connected to slip rings that energize the magnets from about the 6 o'clock position and de-energize the magnets at about the 11 o'clock position. The permanent magnets are moved away from the blind trommel at about the 11:00 o'clock position. The magnetic material is released from the blind trommel at about the 11:00 o'clock position and collected in a tray inside the blind trommel. One magnet or a plurality of magnets can be used,
The present disclosure describes a system that includes a rotating non-ferrous drum positioned on or in an external magnetic arc. Slurry containing solids is fed into the drum by a gravity infeed system. The system is easily maintained, relatively lightweight and non-restrictive in design. The gravity fed slurry infeed system includes an infeed hopper mounted on a hopper support structure, a variable speed drive system for rotation of the drum, a removable inlet pipe, an infeed baffle, spray seal, guide rollers, roller guides and magnetic arc actuators for the rotatable magnetic arc that has a decreasing magnetic field at an upper discharge end of the arc. The magnetic arc in one embodiment extends around both a lower half and an upper half so as to extend more than 180 degrees around the drum. In another embodiment the magnetic arc only extends around one half, for example the lower half so as to remove the need for the structure of the upper half, which may be a useful embodiment in the roughing or cobbing stage of iron ore magnetic separation in for example an iron ore beneficiation plant.
The magnetic arc is adjustable in its position relative to the drum so as to adjust the magnetite discharge point within the drum. The drum has a tiltable support structure to adjust the angle of the drum relative to horizontal for optimal slurry flow. A removable infeed deflector plate includes an inlet screen. The non-ferrous drum has an adjustable discharge weir, a discharge lip, and a removable magnetite hopper having a spray bar and nozzles, The magnetite hopper slides on rails. The hopper is non-ferrous and supported on a hopper and rail support structure.
In some applications a screen may be added to the discharge lip for capturing and retaining oversized non-ferrous material thereby reducing pump wear.
This system has other applications outside of the mineral processing industry and could be utilized for other separation applications, for example for the recovery or removal of tramp metal in the wood products industry or for the recovery or removal of tramp metal or other ferro-magnetic material in gravel in for example a trommel screen.
Applicant is not aware of apparatus and methods such as disclosed in the present specification to recover magnetite using an arcuate, static, array of magnets closely surrounding a rotating drum through which the slurry flows, where the array of magnets are permanent magnets arranged in decreasing strength from very strong magnets at the bottom of the array to release strength magnets at the opposite end of the array, and wherein the position of the array may be rotated relative to the drum, and where the magnet core includes permanent magnets arranged to have radially aligned magnetic fields, as better described below, in a ring arrangement surrounding the drum along the length of the magnetic arc. The applicant is also unaware of the use in the prior art of eddie producing slurry mixing ribs in the rotary drum, or the use of a back-flow generating spiral auger having spiral flutes deflect the slurry in a counter-flow direction to agitate the slurry back over the corresponding magnetic poles in the magnetic arc. These and the other techniques described herein provide for improved magnetic probing and combing of the slurry to improve the recovery of for example magnetite from the slurry while still allowing an optimized slurry flow rate for uninterrupted productivity.
A magnetite recovery system 10 includes, as seen in the accompanying Figures, a drum or canister 12 (herein referred to as a drum) rotatably mounted on base 14, and having a magnet housing 16 supported on roller guides 18a. The magnet arc is contained within housing 16. Housing 16 wraps partially around, so as to partially encase the drum. The drum is supported on rollers 18 by roller guides 18a mounted to the drum. The drum rotates on the base in direction A about axis of rotation B. Drum 12 is thus rotatably encased within magnet housing 16. In one preferred embodiment, as seen in
The slurry 8 containing the magnetite 30 to be recovered flows from an infeed hopper 20 into, and through, a removable infeed pipe 20a in direction D. The slurry encounters an inlet baffle 22 at the downstream end of infeed pipe 20a and then enters into the upstream end 12a of drum 12 whereat the slurry flow is turned in direction E and dispersed radially through inlet screen 22a in directions F by deflector plate 22b. Upon radial dispersion of the slurry flow from inlet screen 22a, the slurry flow encounters the cylindrical wall of upstream end 12a of drum 12 and turns in direction F so as to flow downstream in direction H in what may be characterized as a partially helical or cork-screwing mixing path along the cylindrical wall 12b of drum 12 while the drum is rotating in direction A.
As seen in
Permanent magnets 24 are mounted in magnet housing 16 so that the radial alignment of their magnetic fields I are as shown in
As seen in
Magnets 24 in arc 26b extend contiguously from magnets 24 in arc 26a in their corresponding ring 25 in the direction A of rotation of drum 12. Magnets 24 in arc 26b act to pull the magnetite 30 remaining in the slurry flow against the interior surface of drum wall 12b so that the magnetite adheres to the drum wall 12b and thus is carried on the wall interior surface as the drum continues to rotate in direction A. The captured magnetite 30 is carried on the drum wall 12b as the drum 12 continues to rotate so that the magnetite moves from the influence of, firstly, the magnets in arc 26a, then from the influence of, secondly, the magnets in arc 26b so as to finally come within the yet again and further reduced magnetic strength of the magnets in arc 26c. Within the arc 26c, the magnetic fields of magnets 24 are sequentially reduced so as to further weaken the magnetic hold on the adhered magnetite 30 as the drum rotates in direction A to take the adhered magnetite to for example the 12 o'clock position.
By way of example, as seen in
In one preferred embodiment such as seen in
The magnetic plates 24a may be mounted to a backing plate 24e. The resulting structure forms the magnetic core.
In one embodiment the angular position about axis B of magnet housing 16 is adjustable relative to drum 12 so as to adjust the magnetite discharge location 12c of discharge D within drum 12, for example to the 11 o'clock position or to the 1 o'clock position depending on the magnetic adherence of the magnetite or para-magnetics in the example of
The drive system for rotating drum 12 may be conventional. For example, a drive motor 38 may rotate a drive shaft 40 which, in turn, rotates drum 12 by means of reduction gearing 42.
Advantageously, magnetite recovery chute 28a and hopper 28b are slidably mounted on horizontal slide rails 44 for retraction of the recovery chute 28a and hopper 28b from inside drum 12. Recovery chute 28a is aligned under the Reducing Field Discharge Magnet Arc 26c when fully slid inside drum 12 on rails 44.
Sprayer 27 includes manifold 27a and corresponding spray nozzles 27b mounted on manifold 27a, Manifold 27a is mounted on or alongside recovery chute 28a, positioned so that the spray from nozzles 27b is directed against the drum wall 12b in zone Z; under the reducing field discharge magnets, or at least under the weakest magnetic field in that zone.
A replaceable annular discharge screen 46 may be mounted around the downstream end 12c of drum 12, downstream of lip or weir 36.
As seen in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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3050235 | Jul 2019 | CA | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62876442 | Jul 2019 | US |