A grinding mill is a rotating piece of equipment used to reduce the particle size of mineral ores. Some important terms which need to be explained for the understanding of grinding mill optimization include the liner profile, ball charge, throughput, and steel consumption. The liner profile describes the internal geometric shields used to protect the shell of the mill and to lift the material as it rotates. The ball charge is made up of the total steel grinding media within the drum.
The liner profile is an important determinant of the path followed by the charge. Specifically, the height and angle of the lifter determine the height to which the balls are raised before cataracting. Ideally, balls should fall at the toe of the ore bed, as this helps direct the energy of the balls to the ore and thus increase throughput. On the other hand, when the balls are in contact with the shell, excessive wear occurs.
Ball charge calibration is another crucial aspect of this process. The material used for grinding media must be hard but also have fracture toughness to prevent the loss of too much mass due to abrasion and impact during continuous operations (Matsanga et al., 2023). Optimal filling prevents power wastage, whereas too many balls oversaturate the grinding zones and cause high media losses without achieving any efficiency gain in milling. Proper adjustment of the size of media based on the ore size reduces excessive steel usage.
The mechanical interactions of liners and grinding balls need to be optimized by applying Discrete Element Modeling (DEM). This method allows engineers to simulate the collision dynamics in the mill between the grinding media, the ore material, and the internal liners of the equipment (Chimwani & Bwalya, 2020). Plant metallurgists can determine the lifter shapes and media filling ratios which allow maximizing impact energy while limiting the abrasive force applied to the machinery.
The mentioned improvements directly help achieve increased throughput and reduced steel use. The design of appropriate liners together with an appropriate ball charge avoids detrimental areas where balls hit empty plates. Continuous tuning of milling speed and material feed rate allows keeping an optimal charge motion even with increasing wear of liners. Such an operational setup achieves maximum tonnage throughput while greatly extending the useful life of all steel elements of the circuit.
In conclusion, optimization of a mineral grinding circuit is a dynamic engineering task requiring constant adjustments to ore hardness and wear. By applying the knowledge gained through DEM modeling and maintaining tight process control, the operating costs of mineral processing plants can be drastically reduced. This way, mechanical energy is used exclusively for breaking up valuable minerals rather than wearing down liners of the equipment.
References
Chimwani, N., & Bwalya, M. M. (2020). Exploring the End-Liner Forces Using DEM Software. Minerals, 10(12), 1047. https://doi.org/10.3390/min10121047
Matsanga, N., Nheta, W., & Chimwani, N. (2023). A Review of the Grinding Media in Ball Mills for Mineral Processing. Minerals, 13(11), 1373. https://doi.org/10.3390/min13111373

