4 research outputs found

    The effects of saline water on the recovery of lead and zinc sulfide during froth flotation

    Get PDF
    In this study, we investigated the effects of water salinity on the flotation performance of pure lead and zinc sulfide mineral samples as well as a Pb/Zn complex sulfide ore by means of micro-flotation and batch flotation experiments. Our results showed higher PbS and ZnS recoveries in more concentrated NaCl salt solutions. The results for the experiments using seawater demonstrated that in the presence of additional ions, such as Ca2+ and Mg2+, the recovery of PbS and ZnS was significantly reduced. As part of this investigation, we developed and implemented a surface complexation model for ZnS based on the presence of two differently charged surface sites. Zeta potential measurements of ZnS particles were used to optimise the parameters of our model. It was found that the surface potentials calculated using this model were in good agreement with the experimental zeta potentials, validating the model for predicting the zeta potential behaviour of ZnS particles over a broad range of pH and NaCl concentrations. Additionally, total interaction free energies were determined as a function of separation distance, representing particle–particle and particle-bubble interactions of our study in different NaCl concentrations. The theoretical analyses showed that asymmetric Pb/Zn particle–particle interactions were repulsive at lower NaCl concentrations, before becoming purely attractive at higher NaCl concentrations. For the case of the symmetric particle–particle interactions, attraction controlled all interactions, regardless of NaCl concentration. The calculated PbS-bubble interactions were repulsive in lower NaCl concentrations but became increasingly attractive in higher NaCl concentrations. Strong repulsions controlled all ZnS-bubble interactions, and these interactions remained repulsive with increasing NaCl concentration. The theoretical projections presented in this study were in good agreement with the measured saline water flotation phenomena

    The effects of NaCl addition on the particle-bubble interactions of galena in the presence of xanthate

    No full text
    This work investigated the effects of NaCl addition on galena flotation in the presence of xanthate. The micro-flotation experiments were performed using NaCl solutions which also included xanthate, at pH 9 (±0.1). Our results indicated that galena recovery improved for higher NaCl as well as higher xanthate concentrations.A pH-dependent chemisorption model for the galena surface, with the addition of xanthate adsorption was calibrated using measured zeta potential values. We propose that xanthate adsorption on galena can take place via two separate mechanisms. The first mechanism involves direct xanthate chemisorption to specific surface sites. The second mechanism involves lead/xanthate complexes formed in the bulk solution. These lead/xanthate complexes attach on the galena surface as hydrophobic lead xanthate salts.The galena-air bubble interactions are repulsive in 1 mM NaCl, with or without xanthate, consistent with the lower galena recovery measured experimentally. An increase to 100 mM NaCl, irrespective of the xanthate addition, resulted in attractive galena-air bubble total interaction energies. The agreement with the experimental results shows the effectiveness of the charge regulated model for estimating the galena and air bubble behaviours during flotation in NaCl solutions
    corecore