Developments in Coarse Particle Flotation - SME Annual Meeting 2026

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
R. Dunne M. G. Nelson A. J. Richins
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
9
File Size:
834 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 22, 2026

Abstract

From the inception of flotation in the late 1800s, coarse particle recovery has been a challenge to practitioners. By the early 1900s, flotation processes included oil flotation, skin flotation, agglomeration flotation, and froth flotation, and for each there was a proliferation of flotation equipment. Ensuring good coarse particle recovery included desliming of the feed and proper conditioning were required. Froth flotation was at first used mainly to treat finer materials from grinding circuits. The maximum size for coarse particles was from 3.18 to 4.78 mm. In froth flotation, large particles with high specific gravity tend not to be recovered. Coal and minerals of low specific gravity and flaky minerals such as graphite, mica, and talc can be floated in larger sizes. In the early 1960s, the phosphate industry began using column cells to recover coarse particle by froth flotation, but early columns suffered from poor bubble generation and sanding at the flat base of the column. Recently, improved coarse particle recovery has been the object of new cell designs—the Eriez HydroFloat™, the Jord NovaCell™, the FLS coarseAir™ cell, and the Cidra P29 integrated system. The paper will follow the development of coarse particle flotation with a focus on the development, laboratory assessment, and operation of the new flotation equipment and technology designed to recover coarse particles.
Citation

APA: R. Dunne M. G. Nelson A. J. Richins  (2026)  Developments in Coarse Particle Flotation - SME Annual Meeting 2026

MLA: R. Dunne M. G. Nelson A. J. Richins Developments in Coarse Particle Flotation - SME Annual Meeting 2026. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2026.

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