Friday 28 April 2023

Out of Africa- but not for long

 Barbara and I are now back in Cape Town, preparing for tomorrow’s long flight back to London. 

After last week’s Comminution ‘23 we spent six fabulous days in Botswana, a post-conference tour that we would highly recommend to those of you coming out to Cape Town for Flotation ‘23 in November. I will post more details in a couple of weeks time.

Next week we will be concentrating our attention on our June conferences, Biomining ‘23 and Sustainable Minerals ‘23, which are now only five weeks away.

Immediately after the Falmouth conferences, Barbara and I will be in Africa again, for the SAIMM Copper-Cobalt conference at Victoria Falls in Zambia, a stunning venue, and we hope to catch up with some of you there. In the meantime a reminder that abstracts for Flotation ‘23 should be submitted within the next four weeks.

Monday 24 April 2023

Good news from Steinert and TOMRA- leaders in the development of sensor-based sorters

It is ironic that sorting, once a major method of concentrating ores by hand, became effectively redundant, but is now enjoying a very strong resurgence thanks to high speed computers which allow pre-concentration of ores at very high rates, reducing comminution energy and water costs. 

Not too long ago little thought was given to water conservation, apart from recycling where possible, and although it was well known that mineral processing, particularly comminution, was a massive consumer of energy this was just accepted as a fact of life and no real efforts were made to attempt to minimise consumption. Now it is realised that conservation of water and energy is not just desirable, but is essential, and every effort is being made to mitigate consumption in these areas. 

Rejection of gangue at as coarse a size as possible is critical and pre-concentration within the crushing circuit aims at reducing the amount of material fed to the energy-hungry grinding circuit. Heavy medium separation has been used for years on ores which are amenable to this, such as tin and lead-zinc ores, and coal. The range of ores which can be pre-concentrated has been dramatically increased in recent years with the development of sensor-based electronic sorting, a completely dry process originally used for the concentration of diamond ores, but now being used in many other areas, due to modern sensors which can rapidly detect a range of physical properties, including grade of particles.

Sensor-based electronic sorting thus has a major role to play ins sustainability, and we welcome one of the leading players in this field, Steinert, who provide not only electronic sorters, but, since 1889, magnetic and eddy current separators, as a sponsor of Sustainable Minerals '23.

Current Sustainable Minerals '23 sponsors

TOMRA Mining also designs and manufactures sensor-based sorting technologies for the global mineral processing and mining industries, and a new, free-to-download publication outlines the different ways today’s advanced digital sorting data services can help mining operations stay in control at all times, take quicker action when necessary, and build a stronger collaboration across teams and departments.

Sensor-based sorting machines inspect every single piece of material that passes through the processing line, collecting a wealth of data. The digitalization of sorting-related services is opening up a world of new possibilities. The new e-book, titled ‘The Benefits of Data-driven Quality Control’, which can be downloaded free-of-charge, focuses on how to efficiently produce high-quality product with maximum control and minimum waste.

From a quality management perspective, every sensor in the sorters is a valuable source of information about the products that pass through them. Today’s sorting data services turn sorters into connected devices and provide a secure, near-live monitoring dashboard for the mine’s sorting lines. Mining processors are able to continuously monitor and optimize the sorting line’s output quality. 

On-site observation, manual sampling and time-consuming reporting and communication become a thing of the past:  the sorter itself provides a constant feed of information based on continuous product sampling on every object. The standard approach of regularly checking metrics on individual machines provides ‘snapshots’ of the situation at specific moments in time, but do not provide a complete overview. The continuous access to quality data across machines, lines, processes and plants put mineral processors in control all the time. Machine operators are able to move fast as required, responding to changes in material composition on the line to ensure consistently high quality of the product. 

A modern sorting data platform can be a powerful quality management tool by turning the data into actionable information by processing, enriching and visualizing it in easy-to-read graphs, creating customized reports and comparisons that provide valuable insights. Automatically recorded, remotely accessible, objective data sets are available on any computer or mobile device, easily accessible by all members of the team, streamlining information sharing and collaboration. Managers can monitor remotely distant or difficult-to-reach mining sites from their offices, enabling them to make operational and business decisions based on experience and hard facts, also comparing and benchmarking data from different sites. 

All these features enable mineral processors to optimize their decision-making and efficiency, ultimately increasing the profitability of their operation. These benefits are accessible through TOMRA Insight, the cloud-based data platform available to TOMRA machine users as a subscription-based service. 

Friday 21 April 2023

Thursday at Comminution '23

After a week of sunshine the weather deteriorated overnight and delegates crowded into the exhibition area for the coffee and lunch breaks.

Eleen Strydom, Maria-Paula Lucero Zalesak of FLSmidth, South Africa
and Peter Wulff of FLSmidth, USA
The Tega Industries team with the MEI team
Amanda with Dean David

Seven companies have now signed up for sponsorship of Comminution '25, the latest being Russell Mineral Equipment, Glencore Technology and Metso Outotec.

Jon with John and Cherylyn Russell of Russell Mineral Equipment, Australia
Jon with Chantel Fourie of Metso Outotec, South Africa
Jon with Cedric Walstra and Hans De Waal of Glencore Technology, Australia

Today has been very intensive, with 19 presentations, ending with a final summary from MEI consultant Aubrey Mainza, of the University of Cape Town, who presented  prizes, on behalf of the Global Comminution Collaborative (GCC), to Tulio Campos, of UFRG, Brazil and Maximilian Tobaben, of Technische Universitat Braunschweig, Germany, for the best overall student presentations at the conference.

Maximilian and Tulio (centre) with members of the GCC

MEI's Amanda Wills then thanked the sponsors, exhibitors, chairmen and presenters for their contributions to a fine event, and invited everyone to Comminution '25, which will be at the Vineyard Hotel from 31 March to 3 April 2025, after which farewell drinks were in the confines of the conference centre rather than outside in the cold and damp.

Welcome visitors from nearby UCT, Megan Becker (left) and Cyril O'Connor (2nd right),
with Sherry Bremner and Aubrey Mainza
The Cornish contingent, Jon Wills, Simon Bailey (Keramos), Felicity Wilshaw (gsl),
Amanda Wills, Nick Wilshaw (gsl), Barbara and Barry Wills

A summary of the technical presentations will be published on the blog on May 8th. Thanks to everyone for making this conference so special.

@barrywills

Thursday 20 April 2023

Wednesday at Comminution '23

A good start to the day with a keynote lecture from our comminution consultant Aubrey Mainza, and further commitments to sponsorship of Comminution '25 from Italian company Eracles, and Keramos.

Eracles is part of the global company Torrecid, and in the photo below Jon thanks Eracles' Managing Director Jorge Roudriguez for their sponsorship, watched by Mehtab Sarao of Eracles and Poulo George Kariyatty of Torrecid South Africa.

Keramos will be sponsoring Comminution '25 as Global Met Tech, which separates the comminution sector of Keramos from other areas of the company (posting of 6th April). In the photo below Jon shakes hands with Simon Bailey, head of grinding media and metallurgy, who is based in Falmouth, UK, watched by Australian representatives Charlie Ingham and Matthew Toll.

Following Aubrey's keynote there were 13 presentations. A less intensive day today to allow for the after effects of last night's dinner! Plenty of time for more chat, exhibition and poster viewing. 

The popular satellite room, where delegates can work while
viewing the presentations

The exhibition is dominated by the huge Russell Mineral Equipment display and I managed to catch all 12 of their conference team by the booth this morning.

Alex Wang and Nick Wilshaw
Jon with Chris Royal of EDS Multishaft mill, South Africa
The Grintec Magotteaux Ceramic Technology team

We were all back in the hotel gardens in the late afternoon for the second of our sundowners.

Wednesday 19 April 2023

Tuesday at Comminution '23

No matter how many times you come to the Vineyard Hotel, you will never tire of the early morning view of Table Mountain from the conference centre.

Good news this morning of two early sponsors for Comminution '25, which will be held here, provisionally from March 31st to April 3rd 2025.  ME Elecmetal was the first company to confirm:

ME Elecmetal Sales Director Stephan De Vos confirms
continuing sponsorship with Jon

Shortly after Chinese company King's Beads confirmed their ongoing sponsorship:

Jon with King's Beads owner Junfu King and colleagues

It was another great day, with 18 presentations and plenty of time for exploring the exhibits and viewing posters.

A regular exhibitor, Cobus Kotze of South African company Dakot,
with Quentin De Jager of Crush Force, South Africa

Jon with Peter Theunissen of Sino Grinding International, South Africa


Better late than never!

With Craig Naude of Solo Resources, South Africa  and Michael Mairhofer
of Cemtec Cement & Mining Technology, Austria

Marnu Lombard of Orway IQ, Australia and Johan Van der Westhuizen of
Process IQ, Australia, with Orkun Oksuz of Minova Proses Madencilik Ltd, Turkey

And then a complete change of venue in the evening, across the City Bowl to Green Point to the Gold Restaurant for the very informal conference dinner, with a 14-dish menu giving us a taste of Africa, paired with traditional Mali puppets, entertainment, good wine and company.

Members of the Global Comminution Collaborative
The team from Brazil
Mintek, past and present

Tuesday 18 April 2023

Monday at Comminution '23

MEI's Jon Wills opened the conference this morning, welcoming the 210+ delegates from 25 countries, and thanking the sponsors for their support throughout the Covid years.

It is great to be back in the wonderful Vineyard Hotel conference centre, with its amazing backdrop of Table Mountain, after an absence of 3 and a half years since Flotation '19 and a full 5 years since Comminution '18. Everyone seems keen to get back to social interaction after a number of years of online events.

Malcolm Powell of the University of Queensland and Liner Design Services, Australia, got the conference off to a fine start with a keynote lecture, but I will leave the details of this and all the other technical presentations to my final report, which I hope to have on the blog in early May. My daily updates will basically be about people and the social activities associated with the four day conference.

The Vineyard has had a complete change of staff since our 2019 visit but the standard of service is proving just as perfect as ever, and we can rest easy knowing that we will be in safe hands for Flotation '23 in November.

There are many new faces at the event but some very familiar ones too. Mike Battersby is a regular at the flotation series as well as comminution and his Welsh company Maelgwyn Mineral Services is a sponsor of both series. Recently MMS opened laboratories in Johannesburg, and the Care Engineer Tyron Killian is attending his first MEI Conference.

Mike Battersby (right) with Tyron and his wife Natasha

I met up with Chris Martin at the SME meeting in Denver a few weeks' ago. His company, RSG Inc of USA, manufactures dry ultrafine grinding machines, and he was talking to two representatives from Huyser Industries, South Africa, Tinus Potgieter and Heinrich Huyser, both new to MEI events. Huyser Industries is developing the Komodo Vertical Stirred Mill for ultrafine wet grinding.

Tinus, Heinrich and Chris in the RSG booth

The long coffee and lunch breaks gave everyone the chance to enjoy the fine food on offer, and to mingle with the exhibitors and view the poster displays.

After a long day of 16 presentations it was nice to end the day with a few glasses of wine at the first of the evening sundowners in the beautiful hotel gardens.