WO2012048368A1 - A blasting method for beneficiating minerals - Google Patents

A blasting method for beneficiating minerals Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2012048368A1
WO2012048368A1 PCT/AU2011/001294 AU2011001294W WO2012048368A1 WO 2012048368 A1 WO2012048368 A1 WO 2012048368A1 AU 2011001294 W AU2011001294 W AU 2011001294W WO 2012048368 A1 WO2012048368 A1 WO 2012048368A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
blasting
mineral
ore
extracted
waste
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/AU2011/001294
Other languages
English (en)
French (fr)
Inventor
Alan Bye
Original Assignee
Crc Ore Ltd
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 Crc Ore Ltd filed Critical Crc Ore Ltd
Priority to US13/878,697 priority Critical patent/US20140144342A1/en
Priority to AU2011316473A priority patent/AU2011316473B2/en
Priority to CA2814209A priority patent/CA2814209A1/en
Priority to BR112013008835A priority patent/BR112013008835A2/pt
Publication of WO2012048368A1 publication Critical patent/WO2012048368A1/en

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Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21CMINING OR QUARRYING
    • E21C41/00Methods of underground or surface mining; Layouts therefor
    • E21C41/26Methods of surface mining; Layouts therefor
    • E21C41/30Methods of surface mining; Layouts therefor for ores, e.g. mining placers
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21CMINING OR QUARRYING
    • E21C37/00Other methods or devices for dislodging with or without loading
    • E21C37/16Other methods or devices for dislodging with or without loading by fire-setting or by similar methods based on a heat effect
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F42AMMUNITION; BLASTING
    • F42DBLASTING
    • F42D3/00Particular applications of blasting techniques
    • F42D3/04Particular applications of blasting techniques for rock blasting

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a blasting method for beneficiating minerals, for example beneficiating ores to increase metal grade prior to mineral processing.
  • the table confirms that major opportunities for energy reduction are in milling. Due to the very high energy cost of fine grinding, if it is incorporated in the flow sheet, it must be used judiciously. However, in the case of finely disseminated ores - whatever the minerals of interest (base metals, iron, tantalum or other) - fine grinding is typically required as part of the extraction process.
  • concentration steps are typically required, sometimes being conducted distant from the mine (raising the issue of transportation costs), to upgrade metal content in the feed material to concentration to a level sufficient to enable economic metal extraction.
  • Concentration involves separation of metal rich ore particles from waste or gangue particles through control over the surface properties of the feed material to concentration in concentrators. Concentrators may also have a large "footprint" taking up a significant amount of space.
  • concentration steps which may involve flotation, density separation and other operations, also add capital and operating expense to processing of a mineral resource. For example, flotation is a common operation for the beneficiation of base metal sulphide ores, such as copper, zinc and lead bearing ores.
  • the present invention provides a blasting method for beneficiating minerals comprising mining of a geological body including a value portion having at least a threshold content of a mineral to be extracted and a waste portion relatively lean in content of a mineral to be extracted wherein mining comprises controlled blasting of the geological body such that the value portion fragments differently than the waste portion, the difference in fragmentation between the value portion and the waste portion enabling separation of a mineral stream concentrated in the mineral to be extracted from the waste portion.
  • Such selective fragmentation of the geological body differs from conventional blasting which is designed to blast an entire block of the geological body at a given energy to produce a top size that can be processed through a primary crushing step, further comminution steps and later in concentrators.
  • conventional blasting which is designed to blast an entire block of the geological body at a given energy to produce a top size that can be processed through a primary crushing step, further comminution steps and later in concentrators.
  • Such a scheme would be commonplace in the treatment of base and precious metal ores.
  • the geological body typically is, or typically includes, an orebody or ore block containing valuable metal containing minerals in association with waste or gangue minerals.
  • Gangue minerals typically have negligible economic value, that is they have very low grade or content of the valuable metal containing minerals.
  • the geological body may comprise value portion in the form of "rich" zones which are rich in valuable metal containing minerals (highest grade zones of the geological body), and waste portion in the form of gangue zones (zones having insufficient grade for economic extraction.
  • the geological body also typically comprises transition zones in which the grade or content of valuable metal containing minerals is intermediate the grade of the gangue zones and rich zones. Such transition zones are comprised within the term "value portion" used in this specification.
  • the efficient extraction of minerals from the transition zones may make the difference between economic and uneconomic extraction of minerals from the geological body.
  • the respective zones are identified by mineralogical investigation of the geological body, this investigation involving assay to determine grade at particular locations within the geological body. Blasting is advantageously controlled to achieve the highest degree of fragmentation in the rich zones of the geological body. Material recovered from the rich zones of the geological body during mining would therefore have the finest fragment or particle size distribution; that is finer fragment distribution than from transition or gangue zones.
  • the metal containing minerals may be sulphide or oxide minerals of base metals (including copper, lead, zinc) and/or precious metals (including gold, silver and platinum group metals).
  • Metal containing minerals may include iron ores.
  • the beneficiation method may enable reduced comminution energy usage. As the controlled blasting of the method enables a size basis for concentration of the mineral to be extracted, and thereby increase of the effective metal content of the ore block, the beneficiation operations required following mining may be simplified and energy requirements reduced. The pre-concentration and size reduction that can be achieved by efficient controlled blasting will also have a major benefit on the down stream process generally.
  • blasting may result in production of a "fine” stream and a "coarse stream".
  • the "fine” material has a finer size distribution than the coarse stream and blasting may be controlled to enable focused generation of fines in value portion(s) of the geological body, it further being observed that the value portion(s) have at least a threshold content or grade of mineral/metal to be extracted and likely significantly higher.
  • threshold content or grade is the minimum enabling economically viable extraction of the mineral from the geological body or deposit.
  • use of the method may also change what is defined as economic ore through blast beneficiation. This would significantly increase the available ore reserves of mining operations by upgrading marginally economic ore and/or converting low grade 'stockpile' material into mill feed grade material.
  • the fine ore material has a higher value mineral or metal content than mineral or metal content in material having the coarse fragment or particle size distribution.
  • the ore material highest in mineral or metal content has the finest fragment or particle size distribution.
  • the coarse or waste stream may then be separated from the fine stream by screening and other operations suitable for separation by particle size. Screen size is selected to split coarse and fine streams at a cut particle size which optimises the separation of coarse stream from fine stream, optimising metal recovery and minimising the volume of waste directed to extractive metallurgical operations. This cut particle size may be determined from the particle size distributions for fine and coarse material and selected to optimise recovery of the mineral(s) to be extracted.
  • Separation of the material stream relatively more concentrated in the mineral to be extracted may advantageously be achieved by sorting on the basis of a physical or chemical property of mineral(s) contained in the value stream. Dry sorting, which avoids requirement for use of water, is preferred for beneficiation by sorting.
  • Optical, electrical and/or magnetic properties of the minerals to be separated may be used as a basis for separation. Where optical sensing is used as a basis for separation visible light, X-Ray light or UV light may be used as a basis for separation.
  • a coarse fraction having a lower gold content, perhaps bound within an iron matrix - perhaps of pyrite or arsenopyrite - may be treated by heap or dump leaching. Alternatively, if there is no economic incentive for further treatment, the coarse fraction may be rejected.
  • Blasting may be controlled to achieve such selective fragmentation behaviour, and beneficiation as above described, through a number of methodologies.
  • Characterization and/or evaluation of the geological body for example an ore block, is required as a first step. Exploration and sampling, involving identification of rock properties and downhole assay at different intervals by reverse circulation drilling, allow a three dimensional ("3D") model of the geological body to be generated using various computer simulation packages.
  • the geological characterization step may particularly focus the method for use where value portions are isolated or makeup small tonnages that are uneconomic to mine selectively with large mining equipment. This is often the case at the periphery of geological bodies. Characterisation and evaluation also requires the geo-mechanical characteristics of the geological body to be identified. This needs rock material properties to be identified, for example by use of geophysical probes.
  • Characterisation and/or evaluation of the geological body allows definition of a 3D blast volume within which blasting is to be conducted for extraction of the mineral(s) of interest. Such simulation allows zones rich in waste portion and rich in value portion to be identified and may also enable mapping of the blast volume by metal grade. Optimum use of the blasting methodology may require additional exploration over conventional blasting to assess, as clearly as reasonably economically practicable, location of value and waste portions. Further data and more detailed characterisation of the geological body is required than for conventional blasting. That is, most effective or optimal use of explosives to achieve the required fragmentation distributions (for effective separation) in different parts of the geological body requires more accurate control over explosive charge density, through control over placement pattern of explosive charges, and charge density per blast hole than conventional blasting.
  • Blasting is then advantageously controlled through a blasting design such that those locations in a blast volume high in waste are fragmented to produce "coarser" material than those locations in the blast volume rich in value portion.
  • a software package particularly useful for ensuring that blasting is conducted to achieve this objective generally of directing the explosive energy from blasting to those locations where greatest degree of fragmentation is required - is the Hybrid Stress Blasting Model (HSBM) developed by the Bryan Mining and Geology Research Centre at the University of Queensland. Other blast simulation and design packages to achieve such objective may also be adopted. Whichever software package, or other technique, is adopted, a blasting design is generated to achieve the desired fragmentation behaviour of the geological body or ore block.
  • HSBM Hybrid Stress Blasting Model
  • Blast design may involve various inputs and the use of blasting techniques adapted to the geological body, or ore block, to be mined. Among those inputs may be included selection of appropriate electronic detonation systems, decking and the use of selected explosive products. Decking is a process of creating a gap in the explosive column of a blast hole so that blasting energy can be directed to a specific location. Infill drilling is likely also be necessary to target high explosive energy to those areas with higher metal content.
  • a starting point for blast model design may involve use of a conventional pattern of blast holes, though with a view to targeting explosive charge density to the rich zones of the geological body to ensure finest fragmentation in these zones. Therefore, explosive charge density may need to differ between different blast holes even though the blast holes are laid out in a conventional pattern. Charge regulation to ensure highest explosive charge density corresponds with rich zones of the geological body and lowest with waste zones is likely to be required. Typically, additional infill blast holes are likely to be required for the blasting method to increase explosive energy distribution in value portion (rich and transition zones) of the geological body. Optimal locations for these infill blast holes may be determined based on assay results identifying the value portions of the geological body.
  • blast model can be adapted using this data to enable efficient control over blasting and achievement of fragmentation distributions which enable more effective separation of mineral stream(s) concentrated in the mineral to be extracted.
  • the waste portion may still comprise some mineral(s) of economic interest. Therefore, further treatment, for example beneficiation by dry sorting, or processing of the waste portion for liberation of minerals or metals, for example by heap or dump leaching, is not precluded.
  • extractive processes will be focused on the value portion, typically comprised in the above described fine stream.
  • the blasting method of beneficiating the geological body enables reductions in comminution energy consumption and may make exploitation of some ore bodies economic where previously processing could not have been economic.
  • the method also offers scope for simplification of concentration and extraction steps when exploiting a mineral resource.
  • Figure 1 is a graphic showing a blast design for a geological body to be beneficiated using blasting in accordance with the method of one embodiment of the present invention
  • Figure 2 is a graphic showing generation of fines in an ore body when a method in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention is conducted.
  • Figure 3 shows fragment size distributions for ore and waste streams produced following blasting of the geological body with the blast design illustrated in Figure 1 .
  • the graphic shows a geological body or ore block 10 including a value portion in the form of a mineralized ore body - for example being a finely disseminated gold containing ore body 20 containing 5 g/t ore in gold.
  • the ore body 20 forms an incline or vein in geological body 10.
  • Surrounding the gold containing ore body 20 is a body 30 of waste or gangue material, this forming the waste portion of ore block 10.
  • the gold containing ore body 20 was defined following exploration and sampling and it is established that the ore body 20 comprises finely disseminated ore.
  • Such exploration activity also well defines waste body 30, allowing a 3D model of the ore block 10 to be designed using modelling packages available to those skilled in the art.
  • the ore block 10 could not be economically exploited by conventional means.
  • rock material properties of ore body 20 are identified by use of geophysical probes, as are known in the art. Such identification enables the geo-mechanical characteristics of the ore body 20 to be identified and input to the blast design as described below.
  • the blasting design could involve, as a starting point, setting a pattern of blast holes useful for conventional blasting of ore body 20. though here with a view to targeting explosive charge density within ore body 20 with the object of ensuring finest fragmentation in the ore body 20. Therefore, explosive charge density may need to differ between different blast holes even though the blast holes are laid out in a conventional pattern. Charge regulation to ensure highest explosive charge density corresponds with value portions (rich zones) of the geological body and lowest explosive charge density corresponds with waste portions is required. Therefore, additional infill blast holes are required for the blasting method to increase charge density and explosive energy distribution in identified value portions of the ore body 20. Optimal locations for these infill blast holes are determined based on assay results identifying the value portions of the ore body 20. More extensive assay of ore body 20 than would be required for conventional blasting is likely to be required to enable effective placement of explosive charges as above described.
  • the blasting design has the objective of generating a higher degree of fragmentation in ore body 20 than in waste body 30.
  • the blasting design which is illustrated by Fig. 1 , here requires a majority of the explosive charges to be located in ore body or value portion 20. That is, release of explosive energy during blasting is concentrated in value portion 20 and only the minimum blasting energy required for loading and hauling is used in the waste body 30.
  • Various blast designs can be used to achieve this, for example two blast holes, one marked 22 and the other being marked 24, are drilled into the ore body 20. Hole 22 is drilled to a slightly greater depth than blast hole 24. However both holes 22 and 24, which have a diameter of 89mm, are drilled to near the base of ore body 22. Both blast holes 22 and 24 are then packed with an explosive emulsion in respective locations 22a and 24a at the base of blast holes 22 and 24.
  • a single hole 26 is drilled into the waste body 30 and this hole 26 is packed with explosive emulsion at three locations (one location 26a being within the ore body 20 and located between locations of explosive 22a and 24a, and two locations 26b and 26c within the waste body 30.
  • Fig. 3 clearly shows a distinct difference between D 50 for the value or ore stream (80 mm) and D 50 for the waste stream (210 mm), this difference being sufficient to allow selective physical separation on the basis of size.
  • screening could be used to separate the value or ore stream, this being a finer fraction from the waste stream which is a coarse stream.
  • the fine ore stream is concentrated and has a higher gold content than the coarse stream. Therefore, as a result of the controlled blasting, a stream having higher metal content is generated than would be generated by conventional blasting which produces material with D 50 of 150 mm and still requiring beneficiation. The blasting therefore results in beneficiation or upgrading of ore block 10 not achievable by conventional blasting.
  • run of mine material is screened at an optimised at a cut size of 200mm, this size being determined as the optimum economic size fraction in this example, with >200mm coarse material going to a waste dump or leach pad to enable heap or dump leaching.
  • the ⁇ 200mm fine material is directed to a process plant for high grade conventional gold extraction, It will be appreciated that use of controlled blasting, as above described, would not require a change of screen size. Mined material could still be screened using a 150 mm screen size. The undersize material from such screening would have higher grade than material obtained from conventional mining operations. Thus, use of controlled blasting achieves benefits without there being any requirement for re-design of the screening plant.
  • Table 2 provides results of a simulation showing how the potential uneconomic ore block 10 has been beneficiated by controlled blasting in accordance with the method described here. TABLE 2
  • Controlled Blasting 717 1 .91 438 Economic The grades in Table 2 are less than the 5 g/t gold present in the ore since waste material is still present after blasting. However, because controlled blasting results in a lesser tonnage of material to be processed, the effective grade is very significantly increased over conventional blasting.
  • the grade of the ore feed to the processing plant has been increased by 90 per cent and the tonnage to be processed has been reduced by 50 per cent. Even though less metal has been recovered than using conventional blasting, the savings in energy, approximately 20 per cent, and other capital and operating costs resulting from the lower tonnage processed, an uneconomic ore body 10 has become economically viable to mine and process.
  • the method is not limited to beneficiation of gold bearing ores.
  • Base metal ores such as copper and other base metal ores, or ores containing platinum group metals may also be beneficiated in accordance with the method.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mining & Mineral Resources (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Geochemistry & Mineralogy (AREA)
  • Geology (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Remote Sensing (AREA)
  • Manufacture And Refinement Of Metals (AREA)
PCT/AU2011/001294 2010-10-11 2011-10-11 A blasting method for beneficiating minerals WO2012048368A1 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US13/878,697 US20140144342A1 (en) 2010-10-11 2011-10-11 Blasting method for beneficiating minerals
AU2011316473A AU2011316473B2 (en) 2010-10-11 2011-10-11 A blasting method for beneficiating minerals
CA2814209A CA2814209A1 (en) 2010-10-11 2011-10-11 A blasting method for beneficiating minerals
BR112013008835A BR112013008835A2 (pt) 2010-10-11 2011-10-11 método de dinamitação para benificiamento de minerais

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

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AU2010227086 2010-10-11
AU2010227086A AU2010227086B2 (en) 2010-10-11 2010-10-11 A Method of Beneficiating Minerals

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US (1) US20140144342A1 (es)
AU (2) AU2010227086B2 (es)
BR (1) BR112013008835A2 (es)
CA (1) CA2814209A1 (es)
CL (1) CL2013000985A1 (es)
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ES2725321A1 (es) * 2018-03-21 2019-09-23 Accenture Global Solutions Ltd Sistema y metodo para controlar un evento de perforacion y voladura
CN110608040A (zh) * 2019-09-20 2019-12-24 瓮安大信北斗山磷矿 一种复杂磷矿的采矿方法
US10837750B2 (en) 2018-01-29 2020-11-17 Dyno Nobel Inc. Systems for automated loading of blastholes and methods related thereto

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US8958905B2 (en) 2011-06-29 2015-02-17 Minesense Technologies Ltd. Extracting mined ore, minerals or other materials using sensor-based sorting
US9314823B2 (en) 2011-06-29 2016-04-19 Minesense Technologies Ltd. High capacity cascade-type mineral sorting machine and method
AU2015292228B2 (en) 2014-07-21 2018-04-05 Minesense Technologies Ltd. High capacity separation of coarse ore minerals from waste minerals
AU2015292229A1 (en) 2014-07-21 2017-02-09 Minesense Technologies Ltd. Mining shovel with compositional sensors
WO2019000037A1 (en) * 2017-06-27 2019-01-03 Reflex Instruments Asia Pacific Pty Ltd METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR ACQUIRING GEOLOGICAL DATA FROM A BOREHOLE
EP3644267A1 (en) 2018-10-26 2020-04-29 Tata Consultancy Services Limited Method and system for online monitoring and optimization of mining and mineral processing operations
US20220049606A1 (en) * 2018-12-18 2022-02-17 Technological Resources Pty. Limited Automated Updating of Geological Model Boundaries for Improved Ore Extraction
EA039837B1 (ru) * 2018-12-20 2022-03-18 Дайно Нобел Инк. Система для автоматической загрузки шпуров и связанный с ней способ
SE544132C2 (en) 2019-07-29 2022-01-11 Metso Sweden Ab A beneficiation arrangement for use with geological material
CN112378300B (zh) * 2020-10-09 2022-12-27 包头钢铁(集团)有限责任公司 一种矿岩混合爆区分离爆破方法
CN113154976A (zh) * 2021-05-19 2021-07-23 安徽马钢张庄矿业有限责任公司 一种采矿爆破用新型扇形深孔布孔方法

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RU2511330C2 (ru) * 2012-07-16 2014-04-10 Федеральное государственное бюджетное учреждение науки ИНСТИТУТ ПРОБЛЕМ КОМПЛЕКСНОГО ОСВОЕНИЯ НЕДР РОССИЙСКОЙ АКАДЕМИИ НАУК (ИПКОН РАН) Способ крупномасштабного взрывного разрушения горных массивов сложной структуры для селективной выемки полезного ископаемого на открытых работах
US10837750B2 (en) 2018-01-29 2020-11-17 Dyno Nobel Inc. Systems for automated loading of blastholes and methods related thereto
US11680782B2 (en) 2018-01-29 2023-06-20 Dyno Nobel Inc. Systems for automated loading of blastholes and methods related thereto
ES2725321A1 (es) * 2018-03-21 2019-09-23 Accenture Global Solutions Ltd Sistema y metodo para controlar un evento de perforacion y voladura
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US11199389B2 (en) 2018-03-21 2021-12-14 Accenture Global Solutions Limited System and method for controlling a drill and blast event
CN110608040A (zh) * 2019-09-20 2019-12-24 瓮安大信北斗山磷矿 一种复杂磷矿的采矿方法
CN110608040B (zh) * 2019-09-20 2021-02-02 瓮安大信北斗山磷矿 一种复杂磷矿的采矿方法

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AU2010227086B2 (en) 2012-09-13
AU2010227086A1 (en) 2012-04-26
CA2814209A1 (en) 2012-04-19
CL2013000985A1 (es) 2014-03-07
AU2011316473A1 (en) 2013-03-14
AU2011316473B2 (en) 2014-06-19
US20140144342A1 (en) 2014-05-29
BR112013008835A2 (pt) 2017-01-31

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