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Australian Centre for Geomechanics Online Repository of Conference Proceedings

Since 2005, the ACG has published conference papers across the geotechnical mining spectrum, including: underground and open pit mining, paste and thickened tailings and mine closure. The repository aims to provide the mining geomechanics fraternity with open access, peer-reviewed conference proceedings that may assist readers to maintain and develop their skills, knowledge and capabilities.

Paste tailings thickened risk seminar conference
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Commission and Operation Experiences of Two Thickened Tailings Facilities, Paste 2020: 23rd International Conference on Paste, Thickened and Filtered Tailings, Paste 2020

?Luossavaara-Kiirunavaara AB (LKAB), an iron ore company with mines in northern Sweden is continuously considering new technologies for handling, transportation and disposal of waste rock and tailings. The mines and concentration facilities are located north of the Arctic Circle which in Scandinavia means an average temperature of about 0° C. Snow from mid-October to mid-May. In winter the temperature may reach -35 to -40° C during weeklong cold spells. At the Svappavaara mine early technical-economical feasibility considerations together with expected space limitations in the concentrator area favored location of two thickened tailings thickeners on a hill close to the disposal area about 1600 m away from the concentrating plant. In this way only short distance pumping of thickened slurry is required and warm process water is recovered directly by gravity from the thickener to the concentrating plant. A thickener of a high-density type with 18 m diameter was first installed. Four years later an additional thickener of paste type with diameter 24 m was put into operation. The design (maximum) capacities were 115 and 275 tph (tons per hour) for the 18 m and 24 m thickeners, respectively, with solids flux rates of 0.45 and 0.6 ton/m2h. Both are planned for common use for 390 tph within a few years. The tailings product is characterized by an average particle size of about 30 µm with a maximum of about 500 µm and about 40 % passing 20 µm. Solids density about 3000 kg/m3. A solids concentration by mass of 70 % was considered sufficient for deposition at a slope of up to 3 %. The objective is to present and discuss the performance of the thickening, transportation and deposition systems during the commission stages and first years of operation. The aim is also to describe how initial conditions related to changes in the tailings production rate together with climatic conditions called for robust by-pass arrangements. Furthermore, complicating factors related to the choice of auxiliary equipment and instrumentation for central functions are discussed.

iron ore sweden artic thickened tailings climate transportation deposition case study design
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Dareh Alou thickened tailings management scheme: design considerations, Paste 2019: Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Paste, Thickened and Filtered Tailings, Paste 2019

This paper presents a case study on the design of a thickened tailings storage facility (TSF) for a proposed open pit copper mine at Dareh Alou, Iran. Dareh Alou mine is a new copper mine owned by National Iranian Copper Company (NICICO). It is located in the Kerman Province of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The nominal production rate is 7 Mtpa for a life-of-mine (LOM) of 25 years. Planning was undertaken for the accommodation of a total of 175 Mt of tailings. The Dareh Alou mine site is located on a sloping side of a valley that is surrounded by hills, grading up to steep mountainous terrain. Since this is a greenfield project the location of the concentrator was selected in conjunction with the tailings deposition options study. Five concentrator locations with various ore transportation options have been investigated together with the tailings and water management study. The result of the study indicated that the best concentrator plant location was at RL 3050 m at approximately 2.5 km from the preferred TSF location. Various tailings and water management options were evaluated, including high rate, high density/high compression, and paste thickeners. These dewatering options were studied alongside the combinations of various TSF and thickener locations. The outcome of the options study indicates that if the price of make-up water is not included in the analyses, the preferred option is utilisation of high rate thickeners. However, after inclusion of make-up water at a rate of USD 1/m3, the preferred option would be the utilisation of high density/high compression thickeners. In this case, the distance between the concentrator and the TSF is such that transportation of un-thickened tailings to thickeners located adjacent to the TSF is the most efficient option. Also, thickening the tailings will provide benefits in reducing the embankment construction cost even though relatively large embankments will be required to close off the valley site.

copper mine thickened tailings water saving trade-off study
Publication Event

Evaluation of the Effects of Climate Change on Water Infiltration on Thickened Tailings in the Atacama Region', in H Quelopana (ed.), Paste 2020: 23rd International Conference on Paste, Thickened and

?Chile is a country with high vulnerability associated with Climate Change, given among other factors, due to the need for development and growing social and environmental conflicts. This motivates the implementation of adaptation, transformation and mitigation measures at all aspects, to deal with climatological phenomena, which despite its future uncertainty, its development is a proven fact by robust and bulky scientific evidence. Motivated by the call from COP25 and the IPCC to assess adaptation and mitigation of effects and consequences of Climate Change, SRK Chile proposed to analyze the response of infrastructure associated with mining in northern Chile, considering General Circulation Models (GCM) downscaled for Atacama region at different elevations, based on the models considered by Chilean Water Directorate (DGA) in its Update of the National Water Balance of Chile (NWBC). This study considers Representative Concentration Pathways RCP 8.5 (most pessimistic scenario) as scenarios to evaluate, same as DGA – NWBC. To observe the effects of these scenarios we applied the GCM as boundary conditions in 1D numerical infiltration models using the software Hydrus. In the simulations water fluxes in a column of thickened tailing above natural soil is analyzed for different precipitation regimes from GCMs. Standard values according to our experience for the hydraulic and geometry properties of the materials forming the columns are used. The results of this study shed light upon the future precipitation’s scenarios affect the available water in the infrastructures at different elevations, providing a quantitative comparison of the infiltration fluxes within the tailing for the GCMs in the Atacama region.

Climate thickened Chile Infiltration case study seepage
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Mixing requirement for ultra paste tailings, Paste 2021: 24th International Conference on Paste, Thickened and Filtered Tailings, Paste 2021

The objective during TSF beach development is to still maintain a slurry that is pumpable and self-distributing at the tailings storage facility (TSF), rather than having to rely on trucks or on conveyors and stacking systems to manage a ‘cake’, but one that will deposit at a steeper beach slope than can be achieved by thickening alone. The use of ultra paste has the potential to broaden the range of topographic conditions that will suit thickened tailings discharge. This paper presents a case study for a large copper mine in which underflow from a series of paste thickeners with a nominal tonnage of 3,660 tph at 59% solids concentration would be mixed with 1,363 tph of filter cake at 80% solids concentration. The combined tailings (ultra paste) would be discharged equally into two open channels (flumes) at the combined solids concentration of 63.5%. The ultimate goal of adopting an ‘ultra paste’ scheme is to produce homogenous consistency tailings, hence proper mixing of the paste and filter cake has to occur. In this study based on a series of tests, the mixing requirement has been assessed. The study also covers a conceptual investigation of natural turbulent mixing (NTM) of the filtered tailings with paste thickened tailings and issues associated with the deposition of the combined tailings, the ultra paste, into the existing TSF. In the conclusion, the study indicates that NTM can possibly occur only for the case in which the total tailings are discharged into one channel, which is not practical due to limitations with regards to tailings management. Hence, mechanical mixing has been recommended in this case.

ultra paste thickened tailings beach slope filter cake mixing requirement
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Paste and Thickened Tailings Transportation Design Aspects Overie, Paste 2020: 23rd International Conference on Paste, Thickened and Filtered Tailings, Paste 2020

?Tailings transport is an integrated element in any wet tailings storage facility (TSF). Tailings from the process plant are often thickened to a moderate or relatively high (but still pumpable) solids concentration, depending on several parameters mainly the TSF deposition requirements and strategies, process plant water security status and the dewatering technology utilised. This paper overviews the transportation of paste and thickened tailings and discusses various aspects and considerations in the hydraulic design of the system. Material characteristics, flow behaviour assessment (rheological behaviour measurement and interpretation) and the basis of design definition are discussed. The recent developments in environmental authorities’ regulations associated with the tailings pipeline burst and leakage management are also reviewed in this paper. The tailings leakage and spillage to the environment is one the main concerns for any tailings hydraulic transportation system, therefore as part of the tailings pipeline design, the pipeline integrity failure (due to pipe wear, overpressure bursting etc.) should be thoroughly analysed to propose proper mitigation measures. The paper discusses a methodology to assess the potential tailings volume release to the environment in an event of the pipeline integrity failure which would be of interest to the operators and designers.

transport wet thickened paste hydraulic design
Publication Event

Severe service valves for applications with high percentages of solids, Paste 2019: Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Paste, Thickened and Filtered Tailings, Paste 2019

The technology behind industrial applications such as fluids with high percentage solids continues to evolve, as do the corresponding regulations and specifications that ensure the safety of workers and the environment. Valves make up key aspects of this technology and often represent the single point of failure for entire operations. More often than not, the valves being used in high percentage solids applications are known as severe service valves (SSVs) due to their ability to withstand extreme conditions. Most experts agree that SSVs are identified by applications, and that these applications are challenging to the valve’s ability to provide a minimum acceptable level of performance over a minimum acceptable duration. This paper serves to determine what the minimum requirements are for SSVs in high percentage solids applications specifically concentrating on paste and thickened tailings.

abrasion erosion tight shut-off severe service valves commodity valves concentrate general purpose valves guided shear gates (GSG) high velocity oxygen fuel (HVOF) metal seated ball valves (MSBV) paste slurry thickened tailings
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Some considerations when preparing thickened tailings for shear strength testing in the laboratory from a slurry, Paste 2021: 24th International Conference on Paste, Thickened and Filtered Tailings, P

While it is trivial to pour a thickened slurry into various forms of moulds or vessels to prepare for element testing, questions remain over whether the density that is reproduced will be relevant to in situ conditions. In particular, preparation of triaxial samples from thick slurries is particularly challenging as a number of steps are required to enable such samples to be ‘free-standing’, with each one of these steps potentially leading to slight disturbance and thus densification of the sample. Where such densification occurs, it would result in the element test results being non-conservative. This could have important implications with respect to expectations of the contractive (and potentially liquefiable) or dilative response of the tailings in situ. To investigate these issues, a series of slurry-deposited triaxial tests was carried out using a non-segregating slurry. As test methods were refined during the program, the amount of disturbance applied to the specimen was reduced. However, comparison of the triaxial tests to slurry consolidometer tests indicated that, regardless of efforts made, the triaxial tests achieved denser states at a given amount of consolidation stress. This was found to be the case using any conceivable range of assumed geostatic stress ratio to interpret the slurry consolidometer results. This outcome is speculated to be a result of the quiescent conditions used in the preparation of a slurry consolidometer specimen, which only requires pouring and then application of vertical load, first using weights, then a load frame. The implications of the increased density seen in triaxial tests compared to the likely more realistic value seen from the slurry consolidometer are discussed. Alternative preparation methods to target this looser density range are briefly discussed.

laboratory testing liquefaction thickened tailings