Plant & Equipment

Glass sand by the bottle

Tooperang Quarry, in conjunction with sand processing manufacturer CDE, has recently installed a new silica sand washing plant at Victor Harbour near Adelaide, South Australia. The plant is producing glass sands for use by Owens-Illinois (O-I), the world?s largest glass container manufacturer, at its glass bottle manufacturing plant in Adelaide.
The new turnkey plant includes a range of equipment from the CDE product portfolio, including the M2500 with integrated counter flow classification unit (CFCU), EvoWash fines recovery system, fine sand screens, attrition cells and spirals. The plant configuration also includes an AquaCycle thickener that reduces the volume of fresh water required to feed the washing plant by more than 90 per cent.
The design feed rate to the plant is 100 tonnes per hour and this produces 50 tph of glass sand with an additional 30 tph of concrete sand. The plant accepts -120mm feed to the M2500 hopper and this material is then transferred to the integrated ProGrade double-deck rinsing screen. The top deck removes the 40-120mm material to a stockpile while the bottom deck sends the 7-40mm material to another stockpile.
The 0-7mm material collects in the ProGrade sump and is then pumped to a five-deck fines screen. At this point, the silica sand is screened at 0.43mm and the 0.43-7mm material is sent to a separate EvoWash sand washing plant to allow for the production of concrete sand. 
Meanwhile, the 0-0.43mm material is sent to an EvoWash fines recovery plant where, following delivery to the EvoWash sump, the material is then pumped to the integrated hydrocyclone, which removes the -63 micron material. The cyclone overflow containing the waste material is then sent to the Aqua-Cycle thickener.
The underflow from the cyclone is delivered to the EvoWash dewatering screen before being transferred to the attrition cells. The function of the attrition cells is to assist with the removal of iron oxide and other deleterious materials from the silica sand. The iron oxide is adhered to the silica particles and must be scrubbed from the surface of the particles to allow removal later in the process.
Refractory heavy minerals and iron oxide particles are then separated from the silica sand through the introduction of spiral classifiers. As these particles have a higher specific gravity than the silica sand particles, the spirals are able to perform the required separation. 
The rejects from the spirals ? a sand product containing the liberated heavy mineral and iron oxide ? is delivered to the EvoWash sand washing plant sump and is destined for the concrete sand product. The silica sand slurry is delivered to the sand sump on the M2500, where it is then pumped to the integrated CFCU.
{{image3-w:200}}{{image4-w:200}}{{image2-w:200}}
 UPWARD FLOW
The CFCU is used to remove the <106um particles from the sand as required by the specification. The CFCU is an upward flow classifying unit that operates on the principle that an upward flow of water will cause the lighter particles to rise and the heavier particles to sink. 
This facilitates the removal of any remaining fines, while the silica sand slurry is then delivered to a dewatering screen. The dewatered silica sand is transferred via an integrated stockpile conveyor. The fine material removed in the CFCU is sent to the concrete sand EvoWash for recovery into the concrete product.
From an initial iron oxide (Fe2O3) content in the feed of 0.3 per cent, the glass sand is required to achieve 0.25 per cent Fe2O3 in line with the O-I Asia specification for coloured glass. The final product has less than 0.1 per cent iron. The Fe2O3 content in the final silica sand product is reduced to 0.1 per cent, ensuring it meets the specification required by O-I at its Adelaide plant.
?We are achieving the 0.1 per cent figure consistently, which is as important as achieving the reduction in the iron content,? CDE project manager Chris McKeown said.
Both the dewatered silica sand and concrete sands are subsequently stockpiled using 26m radial conveyors, which ensure a stockpile capacity of 5000 tonnes. 
From an initial silica content of 93 per cent for the excavated material the final product achieves +99 per cent silica.
Waste water from the plant is processed by the AquaCycle thickener, which recovers 90 per cent of the water for recirculation around the washing plant. 
The plant requires 400m3 per hour of water for its operation and the introduction of the AquaCycle ensures the top-up water supply is only 40m3 per hour. The sludge from the AquaCycle thickener is pumped to on-site settling ponds.
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS
The glass sands produced by Tooperang Quarry will be used at O-I?s Adelaide plant in West Croydon, which produces mainly wine bottles to supply Australia?s renowned wine industry. O-I?s Adelaide plant is one of four Australian O-I facilities. 
Across its four production plants, O-I employs about 900 people and produces almost 860,000 packed tonnes of glass products or about 3.4 billion containers each year.
Following successful completion of the project, CDE has obtained preferred supplier status with O-I to support future sand processing requirements.
?The achievement of a consistent sand specification at Tooperang Quarry in accordance with our requirements proves CDE?s silica sand processing capabilities,? O-I?s procurement director David Abela said.
?CDE also delivered the project in a very professional manner through its project management system and it is for this reason that we will continue to work with CDE to investigate glass sand supply opportunities in other parts of Australia.? ?
Source: CDE

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend