Mill Operators Conference Proceedings USB Boddington
Mill Operators Conference Proceedings USB Boddington
Mill Operators Conference Proceedings USB Boddington
ABSTRACT
The Newmont Boddington Gold (NBG) processing plant was designed for 35Mt/y with ball mills expected to
deliver a combined new mill feed rate of 4837 tonnes/hr. Since beginning commercial production in late
2009, the plant has steadily increased throughput to meet design capacity in 2014 and reached 37 Mt/y in
2015. Through improved efficiencies, changes to the milling circuit have taken place since commissioning to
take the plant beyond its design to an actual throughput of 39.0 Mt in 2017 and a budgeted throughput of
39.4 Mt/y this year.
The NBG milling circuit has four parallel ball mills, each consisting of a 7.9 x 13.4 m ball mill with twin
7.5 MW fixed speed motors in closed circuit with twelve 650 mm cyclones. Each mill is fed by two wet
screens with the undersize gravitating to a mill discharge hopper where it is combined with the ball mill
discharge and pumped to hydrocyclones for classification. The cyclone underflow is re-ground to a target P 80
of 150 µm.
This paper will focus on process improvements made to the NBG milling circuit which include cyclone
reconfiguration, fine screen panel redesign, implementation of an expert control system, mill power draw
increase and grinding media changes to take NBG beyond its design throughput.
INTRODUCTION
Newmont Boddington Gold is situated 12 km north-west of the town of Boddington and 130 km south-east of
Perth in Western Australia. Gold was discovered at Boddington in 1980. Production from the oxide material
began in August 1987 at a throughput rate of 3.0 Mt/y. Oxide ore treatment continued with circuit expansions
and the addition of a facility to treat supergene and high-grade basement ores until 2001, at which time the
operation was placed under care and maintenance. The current mining operations at NBG commenced in
2008, and commissioning of the processing plant started in the latter half of 2009. It has since been ramping
up to its nameplate design of 35 Mt/y with mill production reaching design capacity in 2014, then 37 Mt/y by
2015, 37.9 Mt/y by 2016 and 39.0Mt/y by 2017. In order to achieve these gains in processing rate, small
incremental in-house projects were completed such as cyclone component reconfiguration, fine screen panel
redesign, implementation of an expert control system, mill power draw increase and grinding media changes.
Comminution circuit
The NBG primary crushing circuit comprises two 1.5 x 2.9 m XHD primary gyratory crushers located at the
edge of the mine with a nominal capacity of 3670 t/h each at an open side setting (OSS) of 175 mm. The
crushed product (nominal P80 of 150 mm) is conveyed 2.5 km to the coarse ore stockpile (COS) located at
the plant facility. The COS has a live capacity of 40 000 t and a total capacity of nearly 400 000 t, when
bulldozed to the side. Coarse ore is reclaimed via any one of three reclaim feeders onto the secondary
crusher feed conveyor. The secondary crushing circuit comprises six secondary crusher feed surge bins and
six secondary (MP1000) cone crushers. Un-scalped ore drawn from the COS is fed to the secondary
crushers which are in closed circuit with four 3.6 x 7.3 m single deck banana screens with an aperture of
approximately 50 mm. The secondary crusher closing screen undersize is sent to the tertiary crushing circuit.
The tertiary crushing circuit comprises four feed bins and four 2.4 m diameter by 1.65 m wide high pressure
grinding rolls (HPGRs) each fitted with two 2.8 MW variable speed drives. The HPGR product is conveyed to
and stored in four fine ore bins with a combined live capacity of 20 000 t (up to four hours of live mill feed
surge capacity). The four HPGRs operate in closed circuit with eight 3.66 x 7.93 m wet screens
(two per mill). Wet screen oversize is returned to the HPGR circuit and the wet screen undersize reports to
the grinding circuit. The circuit is summarised below in Figure 1.
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
Figure 1 – Original NBG comminution circuit flow sheet.
PROCESS IMPROVEMENTS
Cyclone reconfiguration
Early ball mill performance at NBG was characterised by a high recirculating load with the 650 mm primary
cyclones providing a cut size finer than the desired P 80 of 150 µm. The design configuration included a
165 mm apex and 255 mm vortex finder.
Commissioning spares included vortex finders up to 305 mm in size. The vortex finder size were
progressively increased using the available commissioning spares to 280 mm at first followed by 305 mm in
an attempt to coarsen the grind and reduce the recirculating load. The 305 mm vortex finders were unable to
achieve the required coarse cut size and it remained at approximately 50 µm lower than the design. The
largest vortex finder able to be fitted into a standard configuration 650 mm cyclone is 305 mm. The standard
cyclone model being used by the vendor was predicting the desired cut size would be achieved, but failed to
correct for the very low viscosity of the slurry being treated at NBG.
With the 305 mm vortex finders not yielding the desired plant performance it was decided to source a
modified top plate arrangement that could accommodate larger vortex finders as shown by Figure 2. The
modified top plate arrangement had been used at another site previously. A single converted cyclone was
trialled with a 355 mm vortex finder and products from it were sampled several times to confirm the desired
increase in cut size would be achieved. Understanding the performance may have been biased by the single
converted cyclone operating in combination with cyclones with 305 mm vortex finders in the remainder of the
cluster an assessment concluded that all 48 cyclones should be modified across the four ball mills as the
vortex finder size could readily be reduced from 355 mm should this prove too large.
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
Figure 2 – Original top plate and 305mm overflow configuration (left) and modified top plate and 355 mm
overflow configuration (right).
The conversion kits purchased for this included an increased diameter overflow pipe which reduced the wear
causing the smaller overflow pipes to hole. After installation of the 355 mm vortex finders the grind became
coarser than target and the amount of oversize being captured by the downstream trash screens became
excessive. Upon reviewing the survey conducted during the 355 mm vortex finder trial, a small increase in
the fraction of top size material was found. Whilst this represented less than 0.1% of the total mass of mill
throughput at NBG, it equated to a significant amount of grit being removed by the trash screens
(approximately 5tph or 120tpd).
The decision was then made to install 330 mm vortex finders and this remains the current configuration.
However as the focus was cut size and reducing recirculating load, the initial changes did not consider the
lower sections of the cyclone. Specifically in failing to change the apex when changing the vortex finder, the
cyclones were placed in a configuration where small changes in feed pressure and/or feed density would
result in roping. Upon reviewing the literature, it was found the apex ratio to vortex finder had changed from
the originally configured 0.65 to 0.5 and thus was in a region of rope or spray, depending on pressure
(Napier-Munn, 2005). With the increase in vortex diameter the required apex diameter was calculated at
200 mm for a ratio of 0.61. Initially there were insufficient 200 mm apex inserts and housings available from
the cyclone vendor so both 190 mm and 200 mm apex inserts were purchased to move the ratio back into
the desired range. As the 190 mm and 200 mm rubber apex inserts wore they were progressively replaced
with 200 mm reaction bonded ceramic units.
The outcome of the cyclone configuration changes resulted in partial debottlenecking of the classification
circuit reducing ball mill recirculating load and increasing ball mill throughput.
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
changed to 10 x 23 mm slotted panels with an open area of 25.1% at the feed end and 8.5 x 23 mm slotted
panels at the discharge end.
In time it was noted the 8.5 x 23 mm slots were prone to pegging which resulted in the fine screen oversize
conveyor becoming a bottle neck. The 8.5 x 23 mm slots were removed from service and the screens fitted
with 10 x 23 mm slotted panels across the entire surface. With wear still causing frequent panel changes,
and low screen efficiency still resulting in bottlenecks on the fine screen oversize conveyor, as mill
throughput was pushed ever higher, a Six Sigma project was undertaken to evaluate the fine screen panel
performance. The project resulted in the feed end aperture panels increasing in thickness whilst still retaining
the same working depth as shown in Figure 3. This allowed more wear material before the screen fixing pin
was reached which would result in the panels dislodging. The discharge end panels were changed to
11.2 mm heavy duty VR panels with an open area of 30.5% which resulted in improved screen efficiency.
15mm
of
wear
Cross Section
40mm Thick Panel
Panel Pin
25mm
of wear
before
panel
pin fails
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
was selected for both commercial and technical reasons (Patterson, 2012). The online optimiser for the
multivariable model predictive control was expected to give a greater economic benefit when compared to a
fixed rule based system. A fixed rule based system will only ever automate the current best operator practice
– i.e. it will only ever follow the rules it is given. An MVC strategy with an optimiser will work within the
constraints of a circuit but the system will constantly push towards any available optimisation (Blay, 2012).
Metallurgical considerations
The relationship between mill throughput, grind size and recovery is well understood at NBG from numerous
in-house and external studies (Rees et al, 2012) (Dare, 2012) (Runge, 2012). Figure 4 shows that as
throughput has increased over ramp-up of the operation, the grind size has also increased.
150
100
50
0
2000 2500 3000 3500 4000 4500 5000 5500 6000
Dry Mill Throughput (t/h)
Figure 4 – Relationship between mill throughput (t/h) and grind size (COF P 80 ) at NBG.
The cyclone overflow (COF) P 80 has a strong correlation with copper and gold recovery. An external review
commissioned by NBG confirmed that an increase in COF P 80 of 10 µm resulted in a recovery decrease of
1.1% for copper and 0.9% for gold (Figure 5). The mechanism behind the decrease in recovery is the
reduction in liberation of the encapsulated copper and gold minerals in non-sulfide gangue, consistently
demonstrated in the monthly composite mineralogy analysis.
Figure 5 – Copper recovery (left) and overall gold recovery (right) as a function of grind size (COF P 80 ).
Although there is a recovery penalty by maximising throughput, overall metal production increases as
throughput increases (Figure 6). This is also more cost effective as operating at a higher throughput does not
increase the unit cost (with the exception of some maintenance costs). Based on these relationships the
ExaSMOC system will be configured to maximise throughput when the circuit is not constrained upstream or
downstream.
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
Copper Production at Various Throughputs and Gold Production at Various Throughputs and Head
Head Grades (%) Grades (g/t)
350 3,500
300 3,000
250 2,500
200 0.09 2,000 0.50
150 1,500
100 0.12 1,000 0.75
50 500
0 0.15 0 1.00
3500 4000 4500 5000 5500 3500 4000 4500 5000 5500
Instanteous Throughput (tph) Instanteous Throughput (tph)
Figure 6 – Modelled copper (left) and gold (right) production at various throughput, head grades and
recoveries.
Although maximising throughput will produce the maximum financial benefit, it is not unusual for the
throughput to be restricted by parts of the plant outside of the milling circuit. The ExaSMOC system was
configured to minimise grind size when operating on restricted throughput owing to upstream and
downstream limitations. This was performed by minimising the cyclone feed density while maintaining a high
mill feed density where possible. Plant surveys and operational data supported this operating philosophy,
showing a reduction in COF P80 with reduced cyclone feed density for a given throughput by improved
separating efficiency as shown below in Figure 7.
Implementation
Due to the potential impact on production and its impracticality, randomised ‘on/off’ style trials to quantify the
benefits of the project were not carried out. Large data sets before and after the implementation of
ExaSMOC was instead used for comparison. This analysis is based upon process data retrieved from the PI
historian. The data was in the form of one hour average values of continuous signals for two years from 20th
February 2011 to 19th February 2013.
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
Maximising milling capacity
The throughput of the processing plant is rarely limited by the milling capacity alone. There are regularly
other plant areas which limit the maximum throughput. To identify the improvement in the maximum milling
capacity it is necessary to filter the data. To identify times when the plant was ‘available’ the following filters
were used:
at least 4.5 secondary crusher feeders running (hourly average);
at least three coarse screen feeders running (hourly average);
at least 3.5 HPGR feeders running (hourly average);
all mills are running, with at least one feeder running per mill;
three or more trash screens running (hourly average); and
two thickener underflow pumps running (both CIL trains online).
Note that these filters use the feeders for the fines plant equipment, meaning the equipment was not only
available but was operating at the time. When these filters were applied to the data, 18.7% of the samples
conformed to these conditions (1625 with ExaSMOC enabled and 1647 with ExaSMOC disabled).
Various other improvements were made around the plant during the data period analysed. As well as the
ExaSMOC implementation, other projects included increasing the maximum HPGR pressure from 160 to
175 bar and increasing the mill power draw from 15.2 to 15.6 MW. The relative timelines for these
improvements is shown in Figure 8.
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
Figure 10 shows the comparison of cyclone feed flow rates for the sample period. There is a 10% increase in
the average flow rate to the cyclone cluster.
20.0% 80%
15.0% 60%
10.0% 40%
5.0% 20%
0.0% 0%
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
Cyclone Feed Density Distribution from 20/02/11 to 19/02/13
Filtered for Plant Availability
25.0% 100%
90%
20.0% 80%
70%
15.0% 60%
50%
10.0% 40%
30%
5.0% 20%
10%
0.0% 0%
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018
discharge end of the mill and then purge when the mill was started. In 2010, investigations commenced with
the vendor to explore whether the power draw could be increased to 15.6 MW (motor input power) or
beyond, however results of this analysis concluded that continued operation above 15.6MW would lead to a
significant reduction in service life of the motor and drive train and hence was not pursued further.
Power draw was increased to 15 MW during 2010 and 2011 as retaining rings were fitted to each mill as
described above. Attempts to increase the power to 15.6 MW in all mills were inhibited due to an imbalance
in the power distribution between the two mill motors. This was eventually traced to differing cable lengths for
the feed supply to each of the two motors. Rectification work commenced in 2011 and by 2012 the mill
power draw was lifted to 15.6 MW following the completion of successful trials. Results showing increased
throughput at the higher power draw are shown below in Figure 14.
1,500
1,400
1,300
1,200
1,100
1,000
14.4 14.6 14.8 15.0 15.2 15.4 15.6 15.8 16.0
Mill Input Power (MW)
14th AusIMM Mill Operators' Conference 2018 / Brisbane, Qld, 29–31 August 2018