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MEI Online: Gravity Concentration: Latest News: Octobober 8th 2002 |
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:: Coal Density Measurement A safe, rapid and environmentally friendly method of measuring coal density has won the Australian coal industry’s prestigious ACARP research excellence award in coal preparation for 2002.
The JKMRC’s innovation was selected from 160 current projects administered by the Australian Coal Association Research Program for the Australian coal industry.
“It is now possible to put 3000 or so particles into the feed hopper of the machine, choose the density fractions into which the particles are to be stored, start the machine and come back an hour and a half later and collect the results.” He said the speed of the new pycnometer is quite remarkable: “Future models may work even faster.” During his 28 years as researcher with the coal and minerals processing sector of the mining industry, Dr Lyman realised that one of the major problems in assessing gravity separation processes is an inability to rapidly and safely measure the density distribution of particles. “For gravity processes, the density is the most important characterisation of the mineral to be fed to the separation process,” he said. “It is on the basis of a coal or mineral particle’s density distribution that they are going to be separated, and this particle by particle density information is absolutely invaluable it’s critical to the whole gravity separation process.” Dr Lyman said that while the pycnometer had been developed to eliminate the use of toxic heavy liquids in the analysis of coal samples, another beneficiary of the technology would be the mineral industry, particularly iron ore and manganese, and anywhere else that gravity processes were used. “The development of a rapid computerised gas pycnometer for the determination of individual particle densities really marks a genuine breakthrough in laboratory instrumentation and analysis equipment for the mineral industry,” he said. “Iron ore and non-coal users will now be capable of carrying out very quickly, rapidly and safely densimetric determinations on samples which have never really been possible before.” The pycnometer has subsequently been licensed for manufacture and sale to Sydney-based sorting machine company UltraSort Pty Ltd through the JKMRC’s commercial subsidiary JKTech Pty Ltd.
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