US2984354A - Hydroxynitriles as flotation modifiers - Google Patents

Hydroxynitriles as flotation modifiers Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2984354A
US2984354A US635135A US63513557A US2984354A US 2984354 A US2984354 A US 2984354A US 635135 A US635135 A US 635135A US 63513557 A US63513557 A US 63513557A US 2984354 A US2984354 A US 2984354A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
ton
flotation
lactonitrile
zinc
sodium cyanide
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US635135A
Inventor
Erwin L Carpenter
Robert B Booth
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Wyeth Holdings LLC
Original Assignee
American Cyanamid Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by American Cyanamid Co filed Critical American Cyanamid Co
Priority to US635135A priority Critical patent/US2984354A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2984354A publication Critical patent/US2984354A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B03SEPARATION OF SOLID MATERIALS USING LIQUIDS OR USING PNEUMATIC TABLES OR JIGS; MAGNETIC OR ELECTROSTATIC SEPARATION OF SOLID MATERIALS FROM SOLID MATERIALS OR FLUIDS; SEPARATION BY HIGH-VOLTAGE ELECTRIC FIELDS
    • B03DFLOTATION; DIFFERENTIAL SEDIMENTATION
    • B03D1/00Flotation
    • B03D1/001Flotation agents
    • B03D1/004Organic compounds
    • B03D1/01Organic compounds containing nitrogen
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B03SEPARATION OF SOLID MATERIALS USING LIQUIDS OR USING PNEUMATIC TABLES OR JIGS; MAGNETIC OR ELECTROSTATIC SEPARATION OF SOLID MATERIALS FROM SOLID MATERIALS OR FLUIDS; SEPARATION BY HIGH-VOLTAGE ELECTRIC FIELDS
    • B03DFLOTATION; DIFFERENTIAL SEDIMENTATION
    • B03D2201/00Specified effects produced by the flotation agents
    • B03D2201/06Depressants
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B03SEPARATION OF SOLID MATERIALS USING LIQUIDS OR USING PNEUMATIC TABLES OR JIGS; MAGNETIC OR ELECTROSTATIC SEPARATION OF SOLID MATERIALS FROM SOLID MATERIALS OR FLUIDS; SEPARATION BY HIGH-VOLTAGE ELECTRIC FIELDS
    • B03DFLOTATION; DIFFERENTIAL SEDIMENTATION
    • B03D2203/00Specified materials treated by the flotation agents; specified applications
    • B03D2203/02Ores
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S209/00Classifying, separating, and assorting solids
    • Y10S209/901Froth flotation; copper

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improved flotation processes for mixed ores which contain several metallic values and require selective separations of their mineral components.
  • certain organic nitriles namely alpha-hydroxynitriles
  • alpha-hydroxynitriles have been found to give results as depressants which are as good as sodium cyanide; in many cases better; and which, in the depression of certain minerals, such as iron minerals, can be used in smaller quantities than is practical with sodium cyanide.
  • lactonitrile and particularly crude lactonitrile, is extremely effective. The latter, which is obtainable as a brownish black liquid by-product in the manufacture of acrylonitrile, can be obtained at a very low price.
  • the alpha-hydroxynitriles are organic liquids and thus can be fed readily either directly or in water solutions to conditioning or flotation operations. With the solid depressants formerly used, solution is an unavoidable 2,984,354- Patented May 16, 1961 The exact mechanism of the depressing action of the alpha-hydroxynitriles is not fully known. It is not merely a question of the presence of a CN group because prerequisite for uniformity of feeding. This added flexibility is an advantage of the present invention.
  • flotation conditions will vary, of course, from ore to ore, each ore having optimum requirements for the type and amount of flotation promoter used, frother, flotation time, pH, etc., and in the following illustrative examples in each case the flotation conditions will be used which have been found to be optimum for the operation when sodium cyanide is used. All examples are carried out in laboratory-type Fagergren flotation machine using 600 g. charges at standard flotation pulp density of about 25% solids. The standard laboratory procedure. used in the examples is highly reliable and is applicable to plant practice.
  • Example 1 The tests in this example were carried out with pyrite only to show relative depressing powers with different amounts of reagent.
  • a 90-10 silica-pyrite mixture was ground to 65 mesh with l lb./ton of lime and successive portions after dilution to flotation pulp density were floated in a Fagergren flotation machine at a pH of 9 with 0.1 lb./ton sodium ethyl xanthate as the promoter and 0.03 lb./ton polypropylene glycol as the frother.
  • the flotation was effected for five minutes and the percentage of pyrite depressed determined. Varying amounts of sodium cyanide and lactonitrile were used in the different tests and one was run as a blank with the addition of no depressant. The results appear in the following table.
  • NaCN Lactonitrile is a very much more active depressant for pyrite than is sodium cyanide. At 0.01 lb./ton NaCN equivalent there was no depression with sodium cyanide and quite substantial depression with lactonitrile which reached at an amount (0.015 lbL/ton) in which the NaCN gave no significantly useful results. More than twice as much NaCN had to be added before comparable depressions were obtained.
  • Example 3 This example used a test ore which is the same as in Example 1, the flotation being eifected at 22% solids. On successive portions diiferent nitriles were used and the results appear in the following table.
  • Example 4 A Missouri lead-zinc ore containing a small amount of pyrite and carbonate gangue minerals was ground to 65 mesh, diluted to about solids, conditioned for two minutes with 0.12 lb./ton sodium silicate and for three minutes longer with 0.09 lb./ton of sodium cyanide, followed by another two minutes with 0.03 lb./ton sodium ethyl xanthate and for one minute longer with a 0.12 lb./ton pine oil. The mixture was then floated for four minutes to obtain a lead concentrate.
  • the resulting tailing was conditioned for two minutes with 0.43 lb./ton soda ash and for a further four minutes with 1.0 lb./ton copper sulfate pentahydrate, followed by two minutes longer with 0.2 lb./ton technical sodium diethyldithiophosphate and for one minute longer with 0.07 lb./ton pine oil.
  • the flotation was then carried on 'for four minutes to produce a zinc concentrate.
  • Example 5 A pyrite-bearing lead-zinc ore from northern New York analyzing 0.35% Pb, 9.1% Zn and 9.3% Fe was ground to mesh at 65% solids, diluted to about 22% solids, conditioned with 0.06 lb./ton sodium cyanide for three minutes and for two minutes longer with 0.06 lb./ton technical dicresyldithiophosphoric acid containing about 6% diphenyl thiourea. The pulp was then floated for four minutes to produce a lead concentrate, the pH being 7.4.
  • tailings were then conditioned for two minutes with 4.0 lb./ ton of lime to produce a pH of 10.9, then for three minutes longer with 1.3 lb./ton copper sulfate pentahydrate, followed by two minutes with 0.13 lb./ton sodium ethyl xanthate and one minute with 0.16 lb./ton pine oil as a frother. Flotation as in the preceding examples was for four minutes to produce a zinc concentrate.
  • the tailings from the lead rougher flotation operation were conditioned for five minutes with 2.0 lb./ton lime, 1.5 lb./ton copper sulfate penthahydrate and 0.1 lb./ton of a 1:1 mixture of sodium mercaptobenzothiazole and sodium di(secondary butyl)dithiophosphate. Thereupon the mixture was floated to remove a zinc concentrate which was cleaned by refioating with 0.5 lb./ ton lime and 0.05 lb./ton of the mercaptobenzothiazole-dithiophosphate mixture together with 0.04 lb./ton of pine oil as a frother.
  • Example 7 An iron-bearing copper ore from Utah containing 0.9% Cu and 2.3% iron was ground to 60% solids 65 mesh with 2.6 lb./ton lime and 0.3 lb./ton sodium cyanide. The mixture was then diluted to 22% solids, conditioned for a minute with 0.03 1b./ton technical dicresyldithiophosphoric acid as promoter and then for one minute with 0.2 lb./ton of a 1:1 cresylic acid-fuel oil mixture as a frothing agent. Flotation was for five minutes to remove a copper concentrate.
  • a method of selective froth flotation of ores containing depressable minerals selected from the group of zinc and iron minerals which comprises efiecting flotation in the presence of an effective amount of an alpha-hydroxynitrile selected from the group consisting of acetone,
  • cyanohydrin and those represented by the formula wherein R is selected from the group consisting of hydrogen, methyl and phenyl to produce a concentrate of the lead or copper relatively poor in zinc minerals, subjecting the tailings of the flotation operation to activation of the zinc minerals, refloating to produce a zinc concentrate relatively high in zinc and relatively low in lead or copper.
  • Migrdichian The Chemistry of Organic Cyanogen Compounds," ACS Monograph 105, Reinhold, New York, 1947, pages 173-176.

Description

rpm-ma United States Patent HYDROXYNITRILES AS FLOTATION MODIFIERS Erwin L. Carpenter and Robert B. Booth, Stamford, Conn., assignors to American Cyanamid Company, New York, N.Y., a corporation of Maine No Drawing. Filed Jan. 22, 1957, Ser. No. 635,135
Claims. (Cl. 209-167) This invention relates to improved flotation processes for mixed ores which contain several metallic values and require selective separations of their mineral components.
Mixed ores, such as lead-zinc ores, iron-bearing leadzinc ores, copper-zinc ores, copper-iron ores, complex copper-lea'd-zinc ores and the like, present problems of selective separations. Differential flotation processes have been developed in which one or more of the minerals, usually zinc and/ or iron, are depressed so that a concentrate of the remaining metal or metals can be obtained, whereupon the zinc can be reactivated with reagents such as copper sulfate and the like and then floated as a concentrate. The standard depressant is sodium cyanide, and with many ores excellent results can be obtained, provided a sulficient and controlled amount of sodium cyanide is used.
Commercially useful as the selective flotation processes using sodium or other soluble cyanides have proven to be, they are by no means perfect. For one thing the cost of cyanide adds to the processing cost and further, with some ores, the completeness of the selective depression is not as perfect as could be desired. This latter factor is of considerable importance especially when the mineral to be depressed is present in fairly large concentration or at least in concentration comparable to that of the desired mineral. Also in the latter case with lean ores, it is difficult to obtain high-grade concentrates. Contamination of each concentrate with other minerals is, therefore, still a problem which varies in seriousness from ore to ore.
According to the present invention, certain organic nitriles, namely alpha-hydroxynitriles, have been found to give results as depressants which are as good as sodium cyanide; in many cases better; and which, in the depression of certain minerals, such as iron minerals, can be used in smaller quantities than is practical with sodium cyanide. While the invention is not limited to any particular alpha-hydroxynitrile, we have found that lactonitrile, and particularly crude lactonitrile, is extremely effective. The latter, which is obtainable as a brownish black liquid by-product in the manufacture of acrylonitrile, can be obtained at a very low price. It is an advantage of the present invention that there is no significant difference between a pure alpha-hydroxynitrile and crude material such as the very dirty, crude lactonitrile referred to above. Why the extensive impurities, amounting to and more in the case of the crude lactonitrile, do not interfere with its depressant action is not known, but the possibility of using very crude and dirty material is a distinct advantage of the present invention and such crude by-product material constitutes the preferred reagents to be used.
The alpha-hydroxynitriles are organic liquids and thus can be fed readily either directly or in water solutions to conditioning or flotation operations. With the solid depressants formerly used, solution is an unavoidable 2,984,354- Patented May 16, 1961 The exact mechanism of the depressing action of the alpha-hydroxynitriles is not fully known. It is not merely a question of the presence of a CN group because prerequisite for uniformity of feeding. This added flexibility is an advantage of the present invention.
other nitriles, even other hydroxynitriles, either have no depressing action whatever or depress so slightly as to be of no commercial significance. We are therefore not dealing purely with a question of using any compound which has a CN group.
In the well-known selective flotation processes using various soluble cyanides of inorganic nature, it is customary to rate consumption on the basis of sodium cyanide equivalent; that is, the weight of a particular cyanide used which has the same weight of cyanide as a given standard weight ofsodium cyanide. Through; out the present specification this conventional nomenclature will be used. It is an advantage of the present invention that the froth flotation processes are in no way changed by using the alpha-hydroxynitriles of the present invention. The same techniques can be employed as have been used in the past with sodium cyanide as a depressant. It is therefore unnecessary for the practical operating man to learn any new techniques. These flotation conditions will vary, of course, from ore to ore, each ore having optimum requirements for the type and amount of flotation promoter used, frother, flotation time, pH, etc., and in the following illustrative examples in each case the flotation conditions will be used which have been found to be optimum for the operation when sodium cyanide is used. All examples are carried out in laboratory-type Fagergren flotation machine using 600 g. charges at standard flotation pulp density of about 25% solids. The standard laboratory procedure. used in the examples is highly reliable and is applicable to plant practice.
Example 1 The tests in this example were carried out with pyrite only to show relative depressing powers with different amounts of reagent.
A 90-10 silica-pyrite mixture was ground to 65 mesh with l lb./ton of lime and successive portions after dilution to flotation pulp density were floated in a Fagergren flotation machine at a pH of 9 with 0.1 lb./ton sodium ethyl xanthate as the promoter and 0.03 lb./ton polypropylene glycol as the frother. The flotation was effected for five minutes and the percentage of pyrite depressed determined. Varying amounts of sodium cyanide and lactonitrile were used in the different tests and one was run as a blank with the addition of no depressant. The results appear in the following table.
NaCN Lactonitrile It will be noted that the lactonitrile is a very much more active depressant for pyrite than is sodium cyanide. At 0.01 lb./ton NaCN equivalent there was no depression with sodium cyanide and quite substantial depression with lactonitrile which reached at an amount (0.015 lbL/ton) in which the NaCN gave no significantly useful results. More than twice as much NaCN had to be added before comparable depressions were obtained.
3 Example 2 Percent yrrhotite de ressed LbJton N aCN equiv. p p
NaCN Lactonitrile It will be noticed that lactonitrile showed very substantial depression in concentrations where sodium cyanide had no effectiveness at all and even at fairly high concentrations, the results were significantly better with the crude lactonitrile.
Example 3 This example used a test ore which is the same as in Example 1, the flotation being eifected at 22% solids. On successive portions diiferent nitriles were used and the results appear in the following table.
Compound tested as depressant:
Percentage of pyrite depressed It 'will be noted that most nitriles showed either no depression at all or a negligible amount, whereas the a'lpha-hydroxynitriles gave excellent depression. A particularly significant comparison is between ethylene cyanohydrin and lactonitrile, the latter being almost sixteen times as effective.
Example 4 A Missouri lead-zinc ore containing a small amount of pyrite and carbonate gangue minerals was ground to 65 mesh, diluted to about solids, conditioned for two minutes with 0.12 lb./ton sodium silicate and for three minutes longer with 0.09 lb./ton of sodium cyanide, followed by another two minutes with 0.03 lb./ton sodium ethyl xanthate and for one minute longer with a 0.12 lb./ton pine oil. The mixture was then floated for four minutes to obtain a lead concentrate.
The resulting tailing was conditioned for two minutes with 0.43 lb./ton soda ash and for a further four minutes with 1.0 lb./ton copper sulfate pentahydrate, followed by two minutes longer with 0.2 lb./ton technical sodium diethyldithiophosphate and for one minute longer with 0.07 lb./ton pine oil. The flotation was then carried on 'for four minutes to produce a zinc concentrate.
The procedure above was repeated, replacing the sodium cyanide with an equivalent amount of lactonitrile, and a third test was run again under the same conditions but with no depressant at all. The metallurgical results appear in the following table.
Depressant used NaCN Lacto- None nitrile Lead concentrate:
Assay, percent Pb 50. 8 57. 3 44. 4 Assay, percent ZN 3. 2 2. 2 3.8 Recovery, percent P 88. 0 88. 2 89. 5 1. 0 0.6 1. 3
Zinc concentrate:
Assay, percent Zn 53. 3 55.1 53.1 Assay, percent Pb.. 0.2 0.3 0. 2 Recovery, percent Z 97. 3 98. 1 95. 2 Recovery, percent Pb. 3. 5 1. 8 1.1
It will be apparent that while substantial depression was effected with sodium cyanide, the results with lactonitrile were definitely better; and in the lead concentrate, the lead was recovered with only 0.6 as much overall zinc contaminant. Similarly, the lactonitrile permitted a slightly better recovery of zinc in the zinc concentrate with only about half as much lead.
Example 5 A pyrite-bearing lead-zinc ore from northern New York analyzing 0.35% Pb, 9.1% Zn and 9.3% Fe was ground to mesh at 65% solids, diluted to about 22% solids, conditioned with 0.06 lb./ton sodium cyanide for three minutes and for two minutes longer with 0.06 lb./ton technical dicresyldithiophosphoric acid containing about 6% diphenyl thiourea. The pulp was then floated for four minutes to produce a lead concentrate, the pH being 7.4.
The tailings were then conditioned for two minutes with 4.0 lb./ ton of lime to produce a pH of 10.9, then for three minutes longer with 1.3 lb./ton copper sulfate pentahydrate, followed by two minutes with 0.13 lb./ton sodium ethyl xanthate and one minute with 0.16 lb./ton pine oil as a frother. Flotation as in the preceding examples was for four minutes to produce a zinc concentrate.
The procedure was repeated twice with equivalent amounts of lactonitrile and of acetone cyanohydrin in place of the sodium cyanide. The lactonitrile was a byproduct from the manufacture of acrylonitrile and contained about 85% of lactonitrile, the product being dirty and brownish black in color. Finally a control float was made under the same conditions with no depressant. The results of the tests appear in the following table.
It will be noted that a substantially better grade lead concentrate was obtained with the nitriles than with sodium cyanide and it was contaminated with less zinc. Recoveries were also somewhat better. In the case of the zinc concentrate again the grade was a little better 0 for the nitriles and the contamination with iron somewhat less.
Example 6' mesh with 1.0 lb./ton of sodium cyanide, 1.0 lb./ton zinc hydrosulfite, 1.0 lb./ton lime and 0.04 lb./ton of a 1:1 mixture of sodium mercaptobenzothiazole and sodium di(secondary butyl)dithiophosphate. After conditioning, the mixture was diluted to 20% solids and conditioned with 0.02 lb./ton of ammonium dicresyldithiophosphate and 0.02 lb./ton pine oil. Flotation was for three minutes to remove a lead concentrate which was cleaned by refloating with a 0.25 lb./ton zinc hydrosulfite and 0.25 lb./ton sodium cyanide.
The tailings from the lead rougher flotation operation were conditioned for five minutes with 2.0 lb./ton lime, 1.5 lb./ton copper sulfate penthahydrate and 0.1 lb./ton of a 1:1 mixture of sodium mercaptobenzothiazole and sodium di(secondary butyl)dithiophosphate. Thereupon the mixture was floated to remove a zinc concentrate which was cleaned by refioating with 0.5 lb./ ton lime and 0.05 lb./ton of the mercaptobenzothiazole-dithiophosphate mixture together with 0.04 lb./ton of pine oil as a frother.
A second test was run substituting an equivalent amount of crude lactonitrile for the sodium cyanide. The results appear in the following table.
Depressant used NaCN Lactonitrile Lead concentrate:
Assay, Percent Pb Assay, Percent Zn. Assay, Percent Fe Recovery, Percent Pb..-" Recovery, Percent Zn Zinc concentrate:
Assay, Percent Zn Assay, Percent Pb Assay, Percent Fe Recovery, Percent Zn.-. Recovery, Percent Pb (D O s s r ss (D OI mews:-
Example 7 An iron-bearing copper ore from Utah containing 0.9% Cu and 2.3% iron was ground to 60% solids 65 mesh with 2.6 lb./ton lime and 0.3 lb./ton sodium cyanide. The mixture was then diluted to 22% solids, conditioned for a minute with 0.03 1b./ton technical dicresyldithiophosphoric acid as promoter and then for one minute with 0.2 lb./ton of a 1:1 cresylic acid-fuel oil mixture as a frothing agent. Flotation was for five minutes to remove a copper concentrate.
The test was repeated, substituting by-product lactonitrile in equivalent amount for the sodium cyanide. The results of the tests appear in the following table.
It will be noted that the lactonitrile. gave slightly higher assay of copper with a somewhat increased recovery. This test illustrates that the nitriles are fully as good depressants as sodium cyanide, even on an ore which is specially suited for sodium cyanide repressant. As has been pointedout above, the improvements: obtained with the nitriles will vary from ore to ore.
We claim:
1. A method of selective froth flotation of ores containing depressable minerals selected from the group of zinc and iron minerals which comprises efiecting flotation in the presence of an effective amount of an alpha-hydroxynitrile selected from the group consisting of acetone,
cyanohydrin and those represented by the formula wherein R is selected from the group consisting of hydrogen, methyl and phenyl to produce a concentrate of the lead or copper relatively poor in zinc minerals, subjecting the tailings of the flotation operation to activation of the zinc minerals, refloating to produce a zinc concentrate relatively high in zinc and relatively low in lead or copper.
4. A flotation process according to claim 3 in which the ore is a lead-zinc ore.
5. A process according to claim 4 in which the alphahydroxynitrile is lactonitrile.
6. A process according to claim 3 in which the alphahydroxynitrile is lactonitrile.
7. A process according to claim 3 in which the ore is a copper-iron ore.
8. A process according to claim 7 in which the alphahydroxynitrile is lactonitrile.
9. A process according to claim 4 in which the nitrile is acetone cyanohydrin.
10. A process according to claim I in which the nitrile is acetone cyanohydrin.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,552,936 McArthur Sept. 8, 1925 FOREIGN PATENTS 362,961 Great Britain Dec. 3, 1931 OTHER REFERENCES Taggart: Elements of Ore Dressing, John Wiley and Sons, Incorporated, 1951, pages 271-276.
Migrdichian: The Chemistry of Organic Cyanogen Compounds," ACS Monograph 105, Reinhold, New York, 1947, pages 173-176.

Claims (1)

1. A METHOD OF SELECTIVE FROTH FLOTATION OF ORES CONTAINING DEPRESSABLE MINERALS SELECTED FROM THE GROUP OF ZINC AND IRON MINERALS WHICH COMPRISES EFFECTING FLOATING IN THE PRESENCE OF AN EFFECTIVE AMOUNT OF AN ALPHA-HYDROXYNITRILE SELECTED FROM THE GROUP CONSISTING OF OCETONE CYANOHYDRIN AND THOSE REPRESENTED BY THE FORMULA
US635135A 1957-01-22 1957-01-22 Hydroxynitriles as flotation modifiers Expired - Lifetime US2984354A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US635135A US2984354A (en) 1957-01-22 1957-01-22 Hydroxynitriles as flotation modifiers

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US635135A US2984354A (en) 1957-01-22 1957-01-22 Hydroxynitriles as flotation modifiers

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2984354A true US2984354A (en) 1961-05-16

Family

ID=24546586

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US635135A Expired - Lifetime US2984354A (en) 1957-01-22 1957-01-22 Hydroxynitriles as flotation modifiers

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2984354A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3386572A (en) * 1965-03-08 1968-06-04 American Cyanamid Co Upgrading of copper concentrates from flotation
US4394257A (en) * 1979-11-19 1983-07-19 American Cyanamid Company Froth flotation process
US4504385A (en) * 1982-12-30 1985-03-12 Sherex Chemical Company, Inc. Ester-alcohol frothers for froth flotation of coal
US4589980A (en) * 1982-10-14 1986-05-20 Sherex Chemical Company, Inc. Promoters for froth flotation of coal
US5544760A (en) * 1994-10-20 1996-08-13 Benn; Freddy W. Flotation of lead sulfides using rapeseed oil

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1552936A (en) * 1924-05-06 1925-09-08 Jr Charles Kenneth Mcarthur Concentration of ores
GB362961A (en) * 1930-09-03 1931-12-03 Reginald John Lemmon Improvements in or relating to the recovery of minerals or metal values by froth flotation

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1552936A (en) * 1924-05-06 1925-09-08 Jr Charles Kenneth Mcarthur Concentration of ores
GB362961A (en) * 1930-09-03 1931-12-03 Reginald John Lemmon Improvements in or relating to the recovery of minerals or metal values by froth flotation

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3386572A (en) * 1965-03-08 1968-06-04 American Cyanamid Co Upgrading of copper concentrates from flotation
US4394257A (en) * 1979-11-19 1983-07-19 American Cyanamid Company Froth flotation process
US4589980A (en) * 1982-10-14 1986-05-20 Sherex Chemical Company, Inc. Promoters for froth flotation of coal
US4504385A (en) * 1982-12-30 1985-03-12 Sherex Chemical Company, Inc. Ester-alcohol frothers for froth flotation of coal
US5544760A (en) * 1994-10-20 1996-08-13 Benn; Freddy W. Flotation of lead sulfides using rapeseed oil

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5411148A (en) Selective flotation process for separation of sulphide minerals
US4387034A (en) Mixed alkylthionocarbamates flotation collectors and ore dressing methods in which the collectors are employed
US2950818A (en) Flotation process
US2302338A (en) Froth flotation
US4256227A (en) Froth flotation method for recovering metal values from their ores by thiourea or substituted thiourea
US6149013A (en) Enhanced flotation reagents for beneficiation of phosphate ores
US4507198A (en) Flotation collectors and methods
US4078993A (en) Processes for flotation of mineral substances
US3590999A (en) Flotation of sulfide ores
US2984354A (en) Hydroxynitriles as flotation modifiers
US3590998A (en) Flotation of sulfide ores
US4220525A (en) Beneficiation of metallic ores by froth flotation using polyhydroxy amine depressants
US2399845A (en) Treatment of ores containing coralt and nickel
US3469692A (en) Use of organic dithiols as flotation reagents
US2298281A (en) Process of flotation separation of ore
US3788467A (en) Flotation process for recovering molybdenum
US4159943A (en) Froth flotation of ores using hydrocarbyl bicarbonates
US3037627A (en) Method of beneficiating sulfide and oxide ores of copper, manganese, lead and zinc
US2285394A (en) Flotation method
US4530758A (en) Ore flotation method
US3309029A (en) Activation of sulfide ores for froth flotation
US2238439A (en) Froth flotation process
US4098686A (en) Froth flotation method for recovering of minerals
US2175093A (en) Process of concentrating ores by froth flotation
US2512669A (en) Flotation process