IsaMill

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The IsaMill is an energy-efficient mineral industry grinding mill that was jointly developed in the 1990s by Mount Isa Mines Limited ("MIM", a subsidiary of MIM Holdings Limited and now part of the Glencore Xstrata group of companies) and Netzsch Feinmahltechnik ("Netzsch"), a German manufacturer of bead mills. [1] The IsaMill is primarily known for its ultrafine grinding applications in the mining industry, but is also being used as a more efficient means of coarse grinding. [2] [3] By the end of 2008, over 70% of the IsaMill’s installed capacity was for conventional regrinding or mainstream grinding applications (as opposed to ultrafine grinding), with target product sizes ranging from 25 to 60  µm. [4]

Contents

Introduction

Figure 1. The growth of both the number of IsaMill installations and their total installed power can be seen in this graph. The gap between the two lines has closed as more powerful mills have been developed and installed. Number of IsaMill installations.png
Figure 1. The growth of both the number of IsaMill installations and their total installed power can be seen in this graph. The gap between the two lines has closed as more powerful mills have been developed and installed.

While most grinding in the mineral industry is achieved using devices containing a steel grinding medium, the IsaMill uses inert grinding media such as silica sand, waste smelter slag or ceramic balls. [2] The use of steel grinding media can cause problems in the subsequent flotation processes that are used to separate the various minerals in an ore, because the iron from the grinding medium can affect the surface properties of the minerals and reduce the effectiveness of the separation. [5] The IsaMill avoids these contamination-related performance issues through the use of an inert grinding medium.

First used in the Mount Isa leadzinc concentrator in 1994, by May 2013 there were 121 IsaMill installations listed in 20 countries, where they were used by 40 different companies. [6]

IsaMill Operating Principles

The IsaMill is a stirred-medium grinding mill, in which the grinding medium and the ore being ground are stirred rather than being subjected to the tumbling action of older high-throughput mills (such as ball mills and rod mills). Stirred mills often consist of stirrers mounted on a rotating shaft located along the central axis of the mill. [7] The mixing chamber is filled with the grinding medium (normally sand, [2] smelter slag, [2] or ceramic [7] or steel beads [7] ) and a suspension of water and ore particles, [7] referred to in the minerals industry as a slurry. In contrast, ball mills, rod mills and other tumbling mills are only partially filled by the grinding medium and the ore.

Figure 2. Schematic view of an IsaMill showing the principles of its operation. Schematic view of an IsaMill.png
Figure 2. Schematic view of an IsaMill showing the principles of its operation.

In stirred-medium mills, the stirrers set the contents of the mixing chamber in motion, causing intensive collisions between the grinding medium and the ore particles and between the ore particles themselves. [7] The grinding action is by attrition and abrasion, in which very fine particles are chipped from the surfaces of larger particles, [8] rather than impact breakage. This results in the generation of fine particles at greater energy efficiency than tumbling mills. [7] For example, grinding a pyrite concentrate so that 80% of the particles are less than 12 µm (0.012 mm) consumes over 120 kilowatt-hours per tonne (kWh/t) of ore in a ball mill using 9 mm balls, but only 40 kWh/t in an IsaMill using a 2 mm grinding medium. [9]

Figure 3. Photograph of an IsaMill disk being pushed into place on the mill's shaft. The slots in the disks are clearly shown. The orange device behind the second disk is the product separator. IsaMill slotted disks and product separator.png
Figure 3. Photograph of an IsaMill disk being pushed into place on the mill's shaft. The slots in the disks are clearly shown. The orange device behind the second disk is the product separator.

The IsaMill usually consists of a series of eight disks mounted on a rotating shaft inside a cylindrical shell (see Figure 2). [10] The mill is 70–80% filled with the grinding medium, [4] and is operated under a pressure of 100 to 200 kilopascals. [8] The disks contain slots to allow the ore slurry to pass from the feed end to the discharge end (see Figure 3). The area between each disk is effectively an individual grinding chamber, and the grinding medium is set in motion by the rotation of the disks, which accelerate the medium toward the shell. [10] This action is most pronounced close to the disks. The medium flows back toward the shaft in the zone near the midpoint between the disks, creating a circulation of the grinding medium between each pair of disks, as shown in Figure 4. [10]

Figure 4. Schematic diagram showing the flow patterns of the grinding medium inside an IsaMill. Flow patterns within an IsaMill.png
Figure 4. Schematic diagram showing the flow patterns of the grinding medium inside an IsaMill.

The average residence time of the ore in the mill is 30–60 seconds. [4] There is negligible short-circuiting of the grinding zone by the feed, as a result of having multiple grinding chambers in series. [10]

The ground product is separated from the grinding medium at the discharge end of the mill. This is achieved without using screens by using a patented product separator that consists of a rotor and a displacement body (see Figure 2 and Figure 4). [10] The relatively short distance between the last disk results in a centrifugal action that forces coarse particles towards the mill shell, from where they flow back towards the feed end. [10] This action retains the grinding medium within the mill. [10]

The product separator is a very important part of the IsaMill design. It avoids the need to use screens to separate the grinding medium from the ground particles. [4] Using screens would make the mills high-maintenance, as they would be prone to blocking, necessitating frequent stoppages for cleaning. [4]

Fine particles are not as susceptible to the centrifugal forces and stay closer to the center of the mill, where they are discharged through the displacement body at a rate equal to the mill’s feed rate. [10]

The design of the IsaMill results in a sharp product size distribution, meaning that the IsaMill can operate in open circuit (i.e. without the need for an external separation of the discharged particles in screens or hydrocyclones to allow coarse over-size product to be returned to the mill for a second pass). [10] It also means that there is less overgrinding at the finer end of the size distribution, such as occurs during the operation of tower mills. [10]

History of the IsaMill

The driving force for developing the IsaMill

The development of the IsaMill was driven by MIM Holdings’ desire to develop its McArthur River lead–zinc deposit in Australia’s Northern Territory, and by the need for finer grinding at its Mount Isa lead–zinc concentrator.

The mineral grains in the McArthur River deposit were much finer than those of operating mines. Test work had shown that it would be necessary to grind part of the ore so that 80% of the ground particles were less than 7 µm (0.007 mm) if a saleable concentrate of mixed lead and zinc minerals (referred to as a "bulk concentrate") were to be produced. [10]

At the same time, the mineral grain size of the lead–zinc ore mined and processed at Mount Isa was decreasing, making it harder to separate the lead and zinc minerals. [11] The liberation of sphalerite (zinc sulfide) grains dropped from over 70% to just over 50% between 1984 and 1991. [11] As a result, the Mount Isa lead–zinc concentrator was forced to produce a bulk concentrate from the beginning of 1986 until late 1996. [1] Bulk concentrates cannot be treated in electrolytic zinc smelters, due to their lead content, and are typically treated in blast furnaces using the Imperial Smelting Process. The Imperial Smelting Process has higher operating costs than the more common electrolytic zinc process, and therefore the payment received by producers of bulk concentrate is lower than that received for separate lead and zinc concentrates. The zinc in the Mount Isa bulk concentrate was eventually worth less than half that of the zinc in the zinc concentrate. [11]

These issues provided a great incentive for MIM to grind its ores finer. MIM metallurgists had undertaken fine grinding test work on samples from both deposits using conventional grinding technologies between 1975 and 1985. [11] However, it was found that conventional grinding had a very high power consumption and that contamination of the mineral surface by iron from the steel grinding media adversely affected flotation performance. [11] It was concluded in 1990 that there was no suitable existing technology for grinding to the fine sizes in the base metals industry. [5] Consequently, Mount Isa’s head of mineral processing research, Dr Bill Johnson, began looking at grinding practices outside the mining industry. [4] He found that fine grinding was well established for such high-value manufactured products as printer inks, pharmaceuticals, paint pigments and chocolate. [4]

Early IsaMill development work

MIM decided to work with Netzsch, which was a pioneer in the fine grinding field, and still a leader. [4] Test work was undertaken using one of Netzsch’s horizontal bead mills. It showed that such a mill could achieve the required grind size. [1] However, the mills used in these industries were used on a small scale and were often batch operations. [1] They used expensive grinding media that frequently needed to be removed, screened and replaced so that the mills would continue to operate properly. [1] The traditional grinding medium consisted of silica-alumina-zirconium beads that, in those days, cost about US$25 per kilogram ("kg") and lasted for only a few hundred hours. [1] Such a high-cost and short-lived grinding medium would be uneconomic in an industry processing hundreds of tonnes of ore an hour. [1]

Subsequent test work focussed on finding a cheaper grinding medium that might make the bead mill viable for mineral processing. This work included using glass beads (about US$4/kg) and screened river sand (about US$0.10/kg) before it was found that the rounded beads produced by granulating reverberatory furnace slag from the Mount Isa copper smelter constituted an ideal grinding medium. [12]

As a result of the success of the laboratory tests, a larger-scale mill was tested in MIM’s pilot flotation plant. It was found that the standard mill suffered a very high wear rate, with the disks being severely worn within 12 hours. [1]

MIM’s development efforts focussed on finding a lining that could withstand the wear and on designing a separator that would retain the oversize grinding medium within the mill while allowing the fine ore slurry to exit. [1]

Initial commercialisation (1994–2002)

With the development of the product separator and changes to reduce the wear rate of the mill, the first two full-scale IsaMills were put into production in the Mount Isa lead–zinc concentrator in 1994. [5] With 3000 liter ("L") volumes, they were six times larger than the largest standard mill previously produced by Netzsch. [5] They had a motor size of 1120 kW [6] and allowed the new design and grinding medium to be proven at a commercial scale. [13] This model of the IsaMill was designated the "M3000". [6]

Figure 5. Photograph on an IsaMill with the split-shell design to allow easier replacement of the shell liner. IsaMill with split shell design.png
Figure 5. Photograph on an IsaMill with the split-shell design to allow easier replacement of the shell liner.

This was the first application of stirred mills in the metals mining industry. [14]

The development of the IsaMill gave the MIM Holdings Board of Directors the confidence to authorise construction of the McArthur River mine and concentrator. The next four M3000 IsaMills were installed in the McArthur River concentrator in 1995. [15]

The first mills installed at Mount Isa and McArthur River initially operated with six disks. The number was increased first to seven disks and finally to the eight disks that are now standard. [8]

Figure 6. Schematic diagram of an IsaMill showing how the shell slides away from the shaft and grinding disks to allow easy access to the mill's internal components. IsaMill shell slides off.png
Figure 6. Schematic diagram of an IsaMill showing how the shell slides away from the shaft and grinding disks to allow easy access to the mill's internal components.

The full-scale IsaMills allowed MIM to refine the mill design to allow improved ease of maintenance. For example, the shell design was changed to allow it to split along the horizontal center-line (see Figure 5). [8] This was done to allow the use of a replaceable slip-in liner, avoiding the need for the shell to be sent away for cold rubber lining and the need to have a stock of spare, lined shells. [8] Also, the direction of flow of feed through the mill was reversed, because most of the disk wear occurred at the feed end, which was initially at the drive end of the mill. [8] By changing the feed end to that opposite the drive end, the disks that required most frequent replacement were the first that were removed from the shaft rather than the last (see Figure 6 and Figure 7). [10]

Figure 7. Photograph of IsaMills with their shells pulled back, exposing their internal components. Photograph of IsaMills with shell pulled back.png
Figure 7. Photograph of IsaMills with their shells pulled back, exposing their internal components.

While the IsaMills at Mount Isa were operated using screened copper smelter reverberatory furnace slag as the grinding medium, [1] those at McArthur River used screened primary grinding mill fines as the grinding medium for the first seven years of their operation and, in 2004, switched to using screened river sand. [9]

The first sale outside the MIM Holdings group also occurred in 1995, with the sale of three smaller "M1000" IsaMills to Kemira for grinding calcium sulfate at one of its Finnish operations. [6]

A fifth M3000 IsaMill was installed in the McArthur River concentrator in 1998 and six more in the Mount Isa lead–zinc concentrator in 1999. [6]

The installation of the IsaMills at Mount Isa, together with some other modifications to the lead–zinc concentrator, allowed MIM to stop producing the low-value bulk concentrate in 1996. [1] The IsaMills made possible the development of the McArthur River mine. [15]

The first sales to external organisations of the M3000 mills were to Kalgoorlie Consolidated Gold Mines Pty Ltd ("KCGM"), Australia’s largest gold producer and a joint venture of Newmont Australia Pty Ltd and Barrick Australia Pacific that operates the Kalgoorlie "super pit" gold mine in Western Australia and the Gidji Roaster, north of Kalgoorlie. [16] The first of two IsaMills bought by KCGM was commissioned at the Gidji Roaster in February 2001 to supplement the treatment capacity of the roaster. [16] A change in the ore type had resulted in an increase in its sulfur content, which in turn increased the mass of sulfide concentrate produced, thus making the two Lurgi roasters a bottleneck in the gold production process. [16] Studies by KCGM metallurgists had shown that ultrafine grinding was an alternative to roasting as a method of unlocking fine gold that could not be recovered without further treatment (so-called "refractory gold"), but until the development of the IsaMill, there was no economic method of ultrafine grinding available. [16]

In 2015 KCGM completed commissioning of a larger M6000 unit at the Gidgi Roaster and was able to subsequently decommission the two Lurgi roasters. A slight decrease in gold recovery was more than offset by increased availability, with the operation of the Gidgi plant no longer being constrained by air quality control requirements. Removal of the roasters was completed early in 2017, although the impressive stack still remains as a landmark.

The IsaMill goes global (2003– )

The initial development of the IsaMill was driven by problems encountered treating MIM’s lead–zinc ore bodies. The next major leap was driven by problems experienced by South Africa’s platinum producers, driving the development of larger mills and initiating the global penetration of the technology.

Around the beginning of the 21st century, South African platinum mining companies were mining increasing quantities of more difficult platinum ore, resulting in decreasing recoveries of the platinum group metals to concentrate and increasing quantities of chromite, which adversely affects smelter performance. [14] These problems drove the industry to investigate the potential of new developments in stirred-medium grinding. [14]

The first mover in the area was Lonmin, which purchased an M3000 IsaMill in 2002. [14] Anglo Platinum, which had at the time 20 operating concentrators around the Bushveld complex, [17] followed in 2003 with the purchase of a smaller M250 IsaMill for testing in its Rustenburg pilot plant. [14] After doing the test work, Anglo Platinum decided to use a scaled-up version of the IsaMill in its Western Limb Tailings Retreatment ("WLTR") project. [14] It worked with Xstrata Technology, by then the holders of the marketing rights, and Netzsch to develop the M10000 IsaMill, which has a volume of 10,000 L and, at that time, a 2600 kW drive. [14] The mill used silica, crushed and screened, as the grinding medium. [14]

The new mill was commissioned in late 2003 and met Anglo Platinum’s performance expectations, including almost perfect scale-up. [14] It had lower operating costs than the smaller M3000 unit installed in a similar duty at Lonmin’s operation. [14]

Like the McArthur River mine before it, the WLTR project was only possible because of the advantages conferred by the IsaMill technology. [9]

The success of the M10000 unit encouraged Anglo Platinum to look at other applications of the IsaMill technology and, following an extensive program of plant investigations and laboratory test work, it decided to install an M10000 IsaMill with a 3000 kW drive in a mainstream (rather than ultrafine) grinding application. [14] The grinding medium selected was a newly-available and low-cost zirconia-toughened alumina ceramic material, [14] which was developed by Magotteaux International. [18]

The results justified an aggressive roll-out of more IsaMills at Anglo Platinum’s concentrators, and by 2011, Anglo Platinum had purchased 22 IsaMills for its concentrators. [19] The majority of the installations are in mainstream inert-grinding applications, producing relatively coarse product particles sizes (for example, 80% of the particles smaller than 53 µm). [19] Anglo Platinum attributed an increase in recovery at its Rustenburg concentrator of over three percentage points to the installation of the IsaMills there. [19]

The M10000 IsaMill has proven very popular and sales of the technology have been strong since it launched onto the global stage. [6] IsaMills are now used in lead–zinc, copper, platinum group metal, gold, nickel, molybdenum and magnetite iron ore applications. [6]

Xstrata Technology has recently been developing a larger M50000 model IsaMill, with an internal volume of 50,000 L, with a drive up to 8 MW. [20]

Advantages of the IsaMill

The advantages of the IsaMill include:

Figure 8. Photograph of the patented IsaMill product separator. IsaMill product separator.png
Figure 8. Photograph of the patented IsaMill product separator.

IsaMill spin-offs

The development of an economic ultrafine grinding technology has made possible atmospheric leaching of minerals for which this was previously impossible. MIM Holdings also developed, through its research facility located in Albion, a suburb of Brisbane, an atmospheric leaching process called the Albion Process.

By using IsaMills to grind the particles of refractory minerals to ultrafine sizes, the Albion Process increases the activity of sulfide concentrates to the point where they can be readily oxidised in conventional open tanks. Thus, the oxidation is carried out without the need for high pressure, expensive reagents or bacteria. [22]

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