Treatment of Iron Tailings at the Forecariah Guinea Mine - Guinea Conakry

Authors

  • Alexander Kwaku Kali University of Mines and Technology
  • William Kwame Buah University of Mines and Technology, Tarkwa

Keywords:

Treatment, Iron ore, Tailings, Magnetic separation, Dense Medium Separation

Abstract

Forecariah Guinea Mine SA (FGMSA) in Guinea - Conakry mines and processes Iron ore. About 0.5 Mt of tailings material has already been generated with additional 4000 tons generated daily. This paper presents a re-treatment technology for the Iron tailings obtained from the processing plant of FGMSA. Metallurgical tests were carried out on the tailings to determine which process route gives the most satisfactory result in terms of recovery and cost. Two representative samples (FCOPD-01 and FCDOP-02), taking from the tailings, were investigated. Particle Size Distribution (PSD) and chemical composition of various size fractions of representative samples of the tailings were performed. Dense Medium Separation (DMS) and Magnetic Separation (WHIMS) were also performed on a number of size fractions. The initial chemical composition of the various size fractions shows that the highest Fe grades were present in the +1 mm fractions at 58.8% and 58.6% for FCOPD-01 and FCOPD-02 respectively. The PSD of the tailings also indicated a mass yield of 77.9% for the +1 mm fraction and 22.1% for the -1 mm fraction. Contaminant Oxides, such as Al2O3 and SiO2 tend to be higher in the finer size fractions (-1 mm) of both samples. Result from the DMS analysis performed on the (-4 +0.5) mm fraction shows an underflow mass yields of 45.98% with Fe grade of 65.55% and overflow mass yield of 53.08% with Fe grade of just 13.5%. Magnetic separation (WHIMS) results on the (-4 +0.5) mm samples also gave varied mass yield and Fe grade at different magnetic intensities (3000 Gauss, 6000 Gauss and 10,000 Gauss). However, the highest Fe mass yield and grade produced from the magnetic separation were 18.10% and 50.8% respectively. The results show that DMS technique has the potential to re-treat the tailings at FGMSA.

Author Biographies

Alexander Kwaku Kali, University of Mines and Technology

Alexander Kali holds a Diploma in Mineral Engineering from the University of Mines and  Technology, he is currently an MSc student in Mineral Engineering at the same university. He is also the processing manager at FGMSA, an Iron mining company in Republic of Guinea- Conakry. He also has over 10 years experience in gold processing industry, having previously worked with companies such as AngloGold Ashanti (Obuasi & Iduapriem), Newmont Mining Corporation (Ahafo – Ghana) and Golden Star Resources (Bogoso – Ghana) His research areas include processing plants design, control and plant optimisation.

William Kwame Buah, University of Mines and Technology, Tarkwa

W. K. Buah holds a PhD in Waste Processing Engineering from the University of Leeds, Leeds, UK and a Master of Science Degree in Mineral Processing Engineering from the Mining Institute of Krivoy Rog, Krivoy Rog, Ukraine. He is currently an Associate Professor at the University of Mines and Technology, Tarkwa, Ghana. His current research interests include mineral processing and extractive metallurgy, waste management, pyrolysis-gasification of wastes and biomass to produce valuable products, including activated carbon for gold adsorption. He is a member of the Society for Mining, Metallurgical and Exploration Engineers (SME) and the Chattered Institute of Waste Management, UK.

References

Krishna, S.J.G., Patil, M.R., Rudrappa, C., Kumar, S.P.,(2013), “Characterisation and processing of some Iron ore of Indiaâ€, pp 113 – 120.

Sahoo, R.K., Acharya, B.C., Naik, B.C., Misra, S.K., (1980), “Mineralogical characteristic of some off grade Iron ore in Indiaâ€, International symposium of beneficiation and agglomeration.

Voges, H.C., (1975) “The Use of Heavy Medium Separation in The Processing of Iron Oreâ€, Journal of The south Africa Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, pp 303 – 306.

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Published

2016-12-19

Issue

Section

Minerals Eng. Articles