The Geometallurgical Framework. Malmberget and Mikheevskoye Case Studies
The Geometallurgical Framework. Malmberget and Mikheevskoye Case Studies
The Geometallurgical Framework. Malmberget and Mikheevskoye Case Studies
Geometallurgy is a growing area within a mineral processing industry. It brings together tasks of
geologists and mineral processing engineers to do short and medium term production planning.
However, it is also striving to deal with long term tasks such as changes in either production flow
sheet or considering different scenarios.
This paper demonstrates capabilities of geometallurgy through two case studies from perspective of
Minerals and Metallurgical Engineering division Lulea University of Technology. A classification
system of geometallurgical usages and approaches was developed in order to describe a working
framework.
A practical meaning of classification system was proved in two case studies: Mikheevskoye (Russia)
and Malmberget (Sweden) projects. These case studies, where geometallurgy was applied in a rather
systematic way, have shown the amount of work required for moving the project within the
geometallurgical framework, which corresponds to shift of the projects location within the
geometallurgical classification system.
1. What is geometallurgy?
1
Mineral processing division (MiMeR) of the Luleå University of Technology (LTU), Sweden.
2
Corresponding author: Viktor Lishchuk viktor.lishchuk@ltu.se
2
Depth of usage in geometallurgy means how the geometallurgical data is used in the
mine:
0. None (neither usage nor collection of geometallurgical data);
1. Collecting data (geometallurgical data is collected but not used);
2. Visualizing data ( the variation within the ore body);
3. Defining production constraints (for example, cut-off grade);
4. Forecast production;
5. Making changes in process based on feed quality (changes are made in the
process beforehand with the knowledge of geometallurgy);
6. Production planning;
7. Applying different production scenarios (geometallurgical data is used to make
large scale decision of the future; e.g. when to invest, what alternative technologies is
selected etc.).
The deeper the level of geometallurgy is, the deeper integration and cooperation
between involved parts of the mineral production chain (geology exploration and
production, mining, processing, sales etc) are.
3. Case studies
3.1. Mikheevskoye
Table 2.
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Table 2. Linkage between geological and metallurgical factors after Williams and Richardson (2004)
Mineral processing flow sheet suggested that hardness, oxidation and presence of
magnetite were the most crucial parameters for the process performance. Some
permutation of these parameters resulted in 13 geometallurgical domains and are
presented in Table 3.
Two mining scenarios were calculated based on the metal grade and
geometallurgical domains. The metal grade scenario assumed that the ore would be
extracted by metal grade and the processing cost would be constant for each block.
Geometallurgical domained approach assumed ore extraction by domains, which
implies variable processing cost for different domains. Discretization of the mining
schedule was done with one year frequency for the next five years.
Since the result of research was not used in production planning, this project was
classified as visualization usage of geometallurgy (level 2, please see
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3.3. Discussion
4. Conclusions
A modern mining industry faces new challenges which were not common several
decades ago. Decreased ore grades, increased variability within ore body and highly
fluctuating commodity prices have higher impact on the projects profitability and thus,
require more accurate short and long term planning. One of the possible solutions for
this is implementation of geometallurgy. Geometallurgy is instrument which allows
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