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Article

Enhanced Flotation Separation of Cassiterite from Calcite Using Metal-Inorganic Complex Depressant

1
School of Minerals Processing and Bioengineering, Central South University, Changsha 410083, China
2
School of Resource and Environmental Engineering, Jiangxi University of Science and Technology, Ganzhou 341000, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Minerals 2021, 11(8), 880; https://doi.org/10.3390/min11080880
Submission received: 21 July 2021 / Revised: 8 August 2021 / Accepted: 11 August 2021 / Published: 14 August 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Flotation Reagents, Volume II)

Abstract

:
At present, the research on flotation separation of cassiterite and gangue minerals is mainly focused on the development of new collectors or depressants, while the research on combined depressants is rare. In this study, the flotation separation of cassiterite and the typical gangue mineral, calcite, was investigated using the metal-inorganic complex depressant AlSS, composed of aluminum sulfate (Al2(SO4)3) and water glass (Na2SiO3·4H2O). The flotation results indicated that, with the assistance of Al3+, the inhibition effect of SS (water glass) on calcite is significantly enhanced, while the inhibition effect on cassiterite is almost unchanged. The zeta potential and adsorption measurements proved that the formation of the negatively charged colloidal particles composed of Alm(OH)n3m−n and SiOm(OH)n4−2m−n tended to adsorb on the positively charged calcite surface, inhibiting the adsorption of sodium oleate (NaOL), while the adsorption of the colloidal particles on the negatively charged cassiterite surface is relatively less. The contact angle measurements indicate that the contact angle of cassiterite in the NaOL + AlSS solution is obviously larger than that of calcite, which indicates that cassiterite has better floatability in this system. The X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis confirms the Al and Si species are adsorbed on the surface of calcite, but not on the cassiterite. In addition, the adsorption of AlSS on cassiterite and calcite changes the chemical environment on the calcite surface, indicating that the adsorption of AlSS on the mineral surface is more inclined to be through a chemical reaction.

1. Introduction

As one of the most important strategic metal resources, tin is widely used in the military, information and communication, mechanical materials, and other fields because of its excellent physical and chemical properties [1,2,3]. As the main source of tin, tin-bearing minerals include stokesite (CaSnSi3O9·2H2O), cassiterite (SnO2), stannite (Cu2FeSnS4), nordenskioldine (CaSnB2O6), and so on [4,5,6]. Among them, the theoretical tin content in cassiterite is the highest, reaching 78.77% [7]. Cassiterite is an important tin oxide mineral, which is a raw material for extracting tin and making tin alloys [8,9,10]. The beneficiation process of cassiterite ore mainly includes gravity separation and flotation, in which flotation is considered to be the most effective way to achieve efficient enrichment of cassiterite [2,11]. Therefore, the research on the flotation separation of cassiterite and associated gangue minerals, such as quartz, calcite, fluorite has attracted many researchers’ interest [12,13,14].
For a successful flotation process, the reagent system is of incomparable importance. At present, the research of cassiterite flotation is mainly focused on exploring the performance and mechanism of new collectors, regulators, and inhibitors [15,16,17]. For example, Qin et al. confirmed that the chemical adsorption of salicylhydroxamic acid (SHA) on the cassiterite surface is the main reason for the superb flotation performance [18]. Chen et al. found that the floatability of cassiterite with the new frother α-terpineol (AT) was nearly 10% higher than the traditional frother methyl isobutyl carbinol (MIBC) with using SHA as the collector [19]. Wang et al. applied a new kind of depressant, disodium salt of adenosine 5′-triphosphate (Na2ATP), to enhance the flotation separation of cassiterite and fluorite [20]. There is no doubt that the development and application of new reagents is a good choice to improve the flotation recovery of cassiterite. However, with the continuous exploitation of cassiterite resources, the high-quality cassiterite resources are gradually exhausted, and cassiterite resources tend to be fine, poor, and miscellaneous [21]. It has been gradually realized that the development of a high-performance reagent alone has limited effect on improving the recovery and grade of cassiterite, while the combination of reagents has greater advantages. For example, Cao et al. confirmed that in the presence of Zn2+ and benzohydroxamic acid (BHA), a new type of chelate ring (-Sn-O-Zn-BHA) formed on the cassiterite surface and resulted in the increase of cassiterite flotation recovery [22]. Gong et al. revealed that the collector styrene phosphonic acid (SPA) had a stronger affinity with Cu(II) than with fluorite surface, and the presence of Cu(II) enhanced the adsorption of SPA on cassiterite surface [3]. At present, these combined reagents are mainly used to improve the recovery rate of cassiterite. In fact, with the increase of gangue components in cassiterite ore, the effective inhibition of gangue minerals has gradually become the key to improve the grade of cassiterite concentrate [23,24]. However, there is little research on the combined depressants for the gangue associated with cassiterite flotation.
In this study, AlSS, an efficient recipe of depressants, was adopted for the flotation separation of cassiterite and calcite, that is, the combination of Al2(SO4)3 and Na2O·nSiO2. The inhibition effect of AlSS for cassiterite and calcite in the micro-flotation experiments and artificial experiments was investigated. The underlying flotation separation mechanism was explored by zeta potential measurement, adsorption measurement, contact angle measurement, and XPS measurement. This study has guiding significance for the cassiterite flotation process, and also has reference significance for other mineral flotation separation processes.

2. Experimental

2.1. Materials and Reagents

Pure minerals of cassiterite and calcite used in the experiments were obtained from Yunnan province, China. After a series of crushing (Jaw crusher), dry grinding (Ceramic ball mill), and screening (Standard sieve), minerals with the particle size of 0.037 mm to 0.074 mm were used for flotation experiments. According to the X-ray diffraction of cassiterite (a) and calcite (b) shown in Figure 1, the samples are of high purity. The samples are high-grade cassiterite and calcite with a purity greater than 99%.
NaOL, Na2SiO3·4H2O and Al2(SO4)3 used in the experiments are of analytical grade. Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and hydrogen chloride (HCl) solutions were used to adjust the pH of the slurry. Ultrapure water was used in all the experimental procedures. The complex depressant of AlSS is prepared in advance. If there are no special instructions, AlSS is prepared by mixing Al2(SO4)3 and Na2SiO3·4H2O in a mass ratio of 1:2. For example, if the concentration of the depressant AlSS is 60 mg/L, then the concentration of Al2(SO4)3 is 20 mg/L, and the concentration of Na2SiO3·4H2O is 40 mg/L.

2.2. Flotation Tests

Flotation tests consists of single minerals experiments and artificial mixed minerals experiments. Flotation experiments were carried out in XFG flotation machine at a spindle speed of 1200 rpm. For each single mineral flotation experiment, 2 g of pure mineral and 35 mL of ultrapure water was added to the flotation cell with a capacity of 40 mL. For artificially mixed minerals flotation experiments, 2 g of the mixed mineral consisted of 1 g cassiterite and 1 g of calcite. The flotation experiments were carried out according to the flowsheet shown in Figure 2. After artificial scraping, filtering, drying and weighing, the concentrates and tailings were collected for recovery and grade measurements. The grades of concentrate and tailings of artificial mixed ore are measured by chemical titration analysis. Each experiment was repeated three times. The average was the final result, and the error bar was the standard deviation.

2.3. Zeta Potential Measurements

The zeta potential measurements were carried out in a Malvern Zetasizer Nano ZS90 (Malvern, London, UK) equipped with a rectangular electrophoresis cell. The samples used for zeta potential measurement were specially ground to less than 0.02 mm. Before measurement, 30 mg of the single mineral powder was added to 40 mL of aqueous KCl (0.01 mol/L) solution and conditioned by magnetic stirring, during which reagents were added to the pulp. The concentrations of the reagents added in the zeta potential measurements were consistent with that in the flotation test. After standing for 20 min, the upper clear supernatant was used for zeta potential measurement. The measurement temperature was maintained at 25 °C and the final result is the average of the three experiments. The average was the final result, and the error bar was the standard deviation.

2.4. Contact Angle Measurements

Contact angle measurements were implemented with a JY-82C contact angle meter. The samples used for contact angle measurement were specially treated. Prior to any comminution processes, mineral sample blocks were picked and cut into rectangular parallelepipeds, which are then fixed with resin and finally polished with a polishing machine. Before each sample is tested for contact angle, the surface is polished from coarse to fine until smooth. The mineral surface is polished one after another on the grinder with polishing paper with roughness of 50, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1000, 2000 mesh. In addition, polished surfaces need to be repeatedly washed with deionized water to remove surface contaminants. After the surface is naturally air-dried, a drop of deionized water or flotation reagent solution is dropped on the mineral surface and the contact Angle is measured with a contact angle meter. Specially, to ensure the accuracy of the measurement, three contact angle tests were performed on the same sample at different surface locations to obtain the average value.

2.5. Adsorption Measurements

The adsorption amount of NaOL in the experiments was measured with an Elementar TOCII instrument (Elementar Co., Langenselbold, Germany), and the adsorption amount of Al3+ in the experiments was confirmed with an inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES, Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA). For each measurement, 2 g of pure mineral and 35 mL of deionized water are added to a Plexiglas cell (40 mL), and flotation reagents are added when the pulp was stirred. After the adsorption is completed, the pulp volume is fixed to 50 mL, then the solid-liquid separation is carried out by centrifugation, and finally, the supernatant is taken for measurement. The adsorption quantity of NaOL and Al3+ on the mineral surface is calculated as follows:
Γ 1 = ( C 01 C 1 ) × V M
Γ 1 = ( C 02 C 1 ) × V M
Γ1 (mol/g) and Γ2 (mg/g) represent the concentration of NaOL and Al3+ adsorbed on the sample surface, respectively. C01 (mol/L) and C02 (mg/L) are the initial NaOL and Al3+ dosage, and C1 and C2 denote the residual NaOL and Al3+ dosage in the pulp, respectively. V and M are the volumes of the solution and the weight of the minerals, respectively.

2.6. XPS Measurements

XPS analyses were performed with an ESCALAB 250Xi energy spectrometer using monochromatic Al Kα radiation (Thermo Fisher Scientific Corporation, Waltham, MA, USA). The measurement scan was performed in a single scan from 1350 to 0 eV, with a residence time of 8 s, passing energy of 150 eV, and a step size of 1 eV. All binding energies were calibrated using the characteristic C1s carbon peak (C1s = 284.7 eV). The samples used for XPS measurement were prepared in the same way as flotation experiments, except that the concentrate after the final filtration needs to be flushed with deionized water three times.
The chemical states of elements are assigned based on the PHI and NIST XPS databases.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Flotation Results

NaOL is one of the most commonly used collectors for cassiterite flotation [25]. The flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite in the presence of NaOL is presented in Figure 3a. As can be seen in Figure 3a, under different pH, because the occurrence state of NaOL and the dissolution behavior of cassiterite are different, leading to a certain difference in the flotation recovery of cassiterite. However, on the whole, cassiterite shows a good flotation performance in the presence of NaOL, especially when the pH is 8.45, the recovery of cassiterite reaches 94.25%. As for calcite, in the whole flotation pH range, the flotation recoveries of calcite are higher than 80% indicating the selectivity of NaOL is poor. When the depressant SS is added, the flotation recoveries of cassiterite and calcite are shown in Figure 3b. As can be seen from Figure 3b the inhibition effect of SS on calcite is stronger than that on cassiterite because the recovery rate of calcite is reduced to about 50%, while the recovery rate of cassiterite is only reduced by about 10%. It is clear that the flotation separation of cassiterite from calcite is still very hard with the depressant SS alone since the flotation recovery of calcite is still very high.
Al3(SO4)2 is a common flotation reagent, which is used as regulator or flocculant. The flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite in the presence of Al3+ is shown in Figure 4. As shown in Figure 4, with the addition of Al3+, both the flotation recoveries of cassiterite and calcite decrease to a certain extent, and the recovery of calcite decreases more obviously. This may be because the added aluminum ions will combine with the collector sodium oleate to form aluminum oleate, which consumes part of the collector. However, overall, under the action of aluminum ions, the recovery rate of calcite is still very high between 60% and 80%. It is obvious that the flotation separation of cassiterite and calcite is still not feasible in the presence of Al3(SO4)2.
Figure 5 depicts the flotation recoveries of cassiterite and calcite in the presence of the combined depressant AlSS. As can be seen in Figure 5a, the flotation recoveries of cassiterite increase from 56.45% at the pH of 6.19 to the maximum of 82.45% at the pH of 8.50 and then slowly decreased to a minimum of 45.45% at the pH 11.81 with the continuous increase of pH. Similar to the recovery of cassiterite without AlSS, hence no real change in cassiterite recovery. For calcite, the flotation recoveries increased slowly from 3.65% to 16.2% in the whole investigated pH range. At the pH of 8.5, the influence of AlSS concentration on the flotation recoveries is shown in Figure 5b. With the increase of AlSS concentration from 0 mg/L to 100 mg/L, the flotation recoveries of cassiterite decrease slowly from 93.85% to 80.15 mg/L, while the flotation recoveries of calcite decrease sharply from 90.05% to 5.75%. There is no doubt that AlSS has good selectivity for the flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite.
For the application of mixed reagents, the mixing ratio of different components has a significant impact on the performance of combination treatment [26]. Figure 6 demonstrates the influence of the mass ratio between Al3+ and SS on the flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite. As shown in Figure 6, with the increase of the mass ratio of Al2(SO4)3 to SS, the flotation recovery of cassiterite fluctuates slightly, while the flotation recovery of calcite first decrease first and then increases. With the mass ratio of Al2(SO4)3: SS = 2:1, the flotation recovery difference between cassiterite and calcite is the largest, reaching 74.3%, and the flotation recovery of cassiterite is the highest among the investigated mass ratios. This is also the reason why the mass ratio of Al3+ to SS is chosen as 2:1 during the research.
Because the micro-flotation results proves that the mixed depressant AlSS shows good selectivity for the flotation separation of cassiterite and calcite, artificially mixed minerals flotation experiments were carried out to further confirm the performance of AlSS. Table 1 exhibits the flotation results of mixed minerals. As can be seen from Table 2, in the presence of the collector NaOL alone, the grade and recovery of SnO2 are 46.65% and 82.27%, respectively. With the addition of the depressant SS, the flotation recovery of SnO2 is almost unchanged, reaching 82.07%, while the grade of SnO2 increases slightly, reaching 10.71%. In the presence of NaOL and AlSS, though the flotation recovery of SnO2 decreases slightly to 77.38%, the grade of SnO2 increased sharply to 82.34%. Obviously, the depressant AlSS also demonstrates super selectivity for the flotation separation of cassiterite from calcite during mixed minerals flotation.

3.2. Zeta Potential Measurements Results

The adsorption of reagent molecules on the surface of the mineral will lead to the change of minerals surface electrical properties, which can be measured by zeta potential experiments [27,28]. Thus, zeta potential measurements were carried out to uncover the possible interaction mechanism between flotation reagents and minerals.
Figure 7 is the species distribution diagram of Al3+ (a) and the distribution coefficient of water glass (b). As can be seen in Figure 6, with the increase of pH, the main forms of Al3+ in the solution are Al3+, Al(OH)2+, Al(OH)2+, Al(OH)3, and Al(OH)4, while the main forms of water glass in the solution are Si(OH)4, SiO(OH)3, and SiO2(OH)22−. When AlSS is added to the pulp, there are two possible ways for the colloidal particles to adsorb on the mineral surface. The first possibility is that the positively charged Alm(OH)n3m−n colloidal particles first adsorbes on the mineral surface, creating active sites for the adsorption of the negatively charged SiOm(OH)n4−2m−n colloidal particles. The second possibility is that the positively charged Alm(OH)n3m−n colloidal particles and the negatively charged SiOm(OH)n4−2m−n colloidal particles will form negatively charged mixed colloidal particles, which can adsorb on the surface of the mineral. Because the AlSS is pre-configured, the latter explanation is more applicable to this system.
Figure 8 depicts the effect of pH on the zeta potential of cassiterite and calcite in different systems. As shown in Figure 8a, compared with the zeta potential of cassiterite in the pure water, the addition of AlSS leads to a negligible negative shift of cassiterite among the investigated pH range (less than 5 mV). The phenomenon can be explained by the fact that the negatively charged cassiterite surface is difficult to absorb the negatively charged AlSS colloidal particle through electrostatic attraction. In comparison, with the addition of AlSS, the zeta potential of calcite decreases sharply among the investigated pH range, which may be closely related to the positive surface potential of calcite (Figure 8b). In the presence of AlSS and NaOL, the zeta potential of cassiterite decreases significantly (more than 20 mV) and, within the studied pH range, the decrease is less at both ends and larger in the middle. Because NaOL is an anionic collector, the change of cassiterite surface potential proves that a considerable amount of NaOL is adsorbed on the cassiterite surface. As for calcite, the zeta potential of calcite only decreases by about 3 mV compared with that of AlSS, which indicates that only a small amount of NaOL is adsorbed on the calcite surface.

3.3. Adsorption Test Results

The adsorption of flotation reagents on the mineral surface is the premise of their effectiveness. Thus, the adsorption measurement is considered an effective method to judge the performance of flotation reagents for different minerals [22].
Figure 9 demonstrates the amount of collector NaOL adsorbed on the cassiterite and calcite surface as a function of the depressant concentration. As shown in Figure 9a, without the addition of depressants, the amount of NaOL adsorbed on the cassiterite and calcite surface are 3.26 × 10−6 mol/g and 3.48 × 10−6 mol/g, respectively. With the increase of the concentration of the depressant SS, the adsorption of NaOL on the cassiterite surface only decreases slightly, which indicating that the depressant SS has little effect on cassiterite flotation. However, the adsorption of NaOL on the calcite surface decreases gradually to 1.96 × 10−6 mol/g when the concentration of SS reaches 100 mg/L. This result is also consistent with the fact that the recovery of cassiterite is only reduced by nearly 5%, while that of calcite is reduced by more than 30% under the action of SS. When the depressant is changed to AlSS, as shown in Figure 9b, the adsorption of NaOL on the cassiterite surface still shows an inapparent change with the increase of AlSS concentration. However, the amount of NaOL adsorbed on the calcite surface decreases sharply with the increase of AlSS, and the adsorption amount is decreased to 0.62 × 10−6 mol/g when the concentration of AlSS reaches 100 mg/L. The change of adsorption amount of collector NaOL on the cassiterite and calcite surface also explains why the recovery of cassiterite does not change much and the recovery of calcite decreases significantly when AlSS is used as a depressant.
In addition to affecting the adsorption of the collector on the mineral surface, the depressants themselves also adsorb on the mineral surface. It has also been proved that there is competitive adsorption between depressant and collector on the mineral surface [29]. Figure 10 depicts the amount of Al3+ adsorbed on the cassiterite and calcite surface as a function of AlSS concentration. With the increase of AlSS concentration, the amount of Al3+ adsorbed on the cassiterite and calcite surface increases from 0 mg/g (without the addition of AlSS) to 0.13 mg/g and 0.52 mg/g, respectively at AlSS concentration of 100 mg/L. The results show that the adsorption of the collectors NaOL and the depressant AlSS on cassiterite and calcite surfaces are in inverse proportion, indicating that there should be competitive adsorption between NaOL and AlSS on the minerals surfaces.

3.4. Contact Angle Measurements

The flotation process of mineral particles occurs at the solid-liquid-gas three-phase interface. The most direct way to characterize the floatability of mineral particles in a reagent solution is to measure the three-phase contact angle on the mineral surface (Figure 11) and a large three-phase contact angle is usually indicative of good floatability of the mineral in the reagent system [22,30]. Thus, the contact angle measurements are carried out to compare the floatability of cassiterite and calcite in different systems.
Figure 12 demonstrates the contact angles of cassiterite and calcite in the pure water, AlSS, and AlSS + NaOL systems. As shown in Figure 12a,b, in pure water, the contact angle of cassiterite and calcite is 42.35° and 50.15°, respectively, which indicates that calcite has better natural floatability than cassiterite. In the depressant AlSS system, the contact angle of cassiterite and calcite is 35.31° and 32.78°, respectively. The results indicate that the depressant AlSS can decrease the floatability of both cassiterite and calcite. In the system of NaOL + AlSS, the contact angle of cassiterite and calcite are 85.72° and 37.26°, respectively, which indicates that cassiterite has good floatability in this system, while calcite has poor floatability. The contact angle results are also consistent with the flotation results.

3.5. XPS Results

XPS is a sensitive quantitative spectroscopic technique for the analysis of the relative concentrations of various components and the chemical states of metal elements on the surface of the mineral before and after reaction [15,29]. The adsorption of reagents on the surface of the mineral is detected by previous measurements, and XPS analyses are conducted to confirm the interaction mechanism between the minerals and reagents.
Figure 13 demonstrates the survey scan XPS spectra of minerals before and after AlSS treatment. As shown in Figure 13a, except core peaks belonging to Sn, O, and C, there are no other peaks on the cassiterite surface, indicating the high purity of the sample. After being treated by the depressant AlSS, no new characteristic peak appears on the surface of cassiterite, which indicates that there is no adsorption of AlSS on the surface of cassiterite. The result is somewhat different from the previous adsorption measurement results, which may be related to the different sample preparation methods of the two test methods. In the preparation process of XPS measurement, the sample needs to be washed three times to reduce the residue on the mineral surface. If the adsorption capacity of the reagent on the mineral surface is small or not strong, it will be washed away. For calcite, as shown in Figure 13b, typical peaks, belonging to Al 2p and Si 2p, appeared on the spectrum of calcite after being treated by AlSS, confirming the adsorption of AlSS on the calcite surface. This inference can also be confirmed by the change of element content on the surface of calcite. As shown in Table 2, after being treated by AlSS, the relative atomic concentration of Al 2p and Si 2p on the calcite surface is up to 4.64% and 6.28%, respectively, which results in a corresponding decrease in the atomic concentration of Ca 2p.
Figure 14 demonstrates the precise scan of Sn 3d core peaks and Ca 2p/2s core peaks on the cassiterite and calcite surface before and after being treated by AlSS. Generally speaking, the change of binding energy in the range of 0.2 eV may be caused by detection error. For a chemical reaction, the change of binding energy of metal elements on the mineral surface will be higher than 0.2 eV [29]. As shown in Figure 13a, in natural conditions, the binding energies of Sn 3d5/2 and Sn 3d3/2 in the spectrum of cassiterite are 486.27 eV and 494.65 eV, respectively. After being treated by AlSS, the binding energies of Sn 3d5/2 and Sn 3d3/2 are shifted to 486.16 eV and 494.60 eV, respectively. Because the peak shifts for Sn 3d5/2 and Sn 3d3/2 are very small (less than 0.2 eV), it can be inferred that the chemical environment of cassiterite surface is not changed by the addition of AlSS. For calcite, in the natural condition, the binding energies of Ca 2p and Ca 2s are 347.05 eV and 350.53 eV and shift to 347.37 eV and 350.75 eV, respectively, after being treated with AlSS. Because the change of binding energy of Ca 2p and Ca 2s on the calcite surface after AlSS treatment is 0.32 eV and 0.22 eV, respectively, it can be inferred that the adsorption of AlSS leads to the change of chemical environment on the calcite surface.
To express the whole flotation separation process more clearly, a diagram is drawn and shown in Figure 15. In the flotation separation pH of 8.5, the surface of cassiterite is negatively charged, while the surface of calcite is positively charged. In the presence of the depressant SS and the collector NaOL, a large amount of NaOL is adsorbed on both negatively charged cassiterite surface and positively charged calcite surface, so both of them has good floatability. At the same time, the recovery of calcite is lower than that of cassiterite because the SS adsorbed on the surface of calcite is more than that of cassiterite. In the presence of the depressant AlSS and the collector NaOL, a large amount of NaOL and a small amount of ALSS are still adsorbed on the cassiterite surface, so the cassiterite still has good floatability. However, AlSS can be adsorbed on the surface of calcite through a chemical reaction, which results in competitive adsorption with collector NaOL. As a result, there little NaOL and a lot of NaOL adsorbed on surface of the calcite, so the floatability becomes very poor.

4. Conclusions

The flotation separation of cassiterite and calcite was investigated in this paper using the collector NaOL and the complex depressant AlSS, and the underlying separation mechanism was revealed by several analysis methods. The main conclusions are as follows.
(1) Under the optimum conditions of pH 8.5, NaOL concentration of 0.2 mM, AlSS concentration of 80 mg/L, the flotation separation of cassiterite and calcite can be realized;
(2) In the artificial mixed mineral flotation test, the flotation recovery and grade of SnO2 in the concentrate were 82.34% and 77.38%, respectively, under the optimum conditions;
(3) Compared with cassiterite, the depressant AlSS is more inclined to adsorb on the surface of calcite, reducing the adsorption amount of collector NaOL on the surface, and at the same time, reducing its floatability;
(4) The colloidal particles composed of Alm(OH)n3m−n and SiOm(OH)n4−2m−n tended to adsorb on the calcite surface through chemical reaction, realizing the goal of selective inhabitation of calcite.

Author Contributions

G.Z.: Methodology, Investigation, Validation, Formal analysis, Writing—original draft. D.Z.: Resources, Writing—review & editing, Supervision, Data curation. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This project was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (51674125, 51604128, 51874150), the Doctoral Scientific Research Foundation of Jiangxi University of Science and Technology (jxxjbs19020), the Jiangxi Provincial Department of Education Science and Technology Research Project (GJJ190486), and the Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Project Fund of JXUST (YB2016001).

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. XRD patterns of (a) cassiterite and (b) calcite.
Figure 1. XRD patterns of (a) cassiterite and (b) calcite.
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Figure 2. Flowsheet of micro-flotation experiment.
Figure 2. Flowsheet of micro-flotation experiment.
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Figure 3. Flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite in the presence of NaOL (a) and SS (b).
Figure 3. Flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite in the presence of NaOL (a) and SS (b).
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Figure 4. Effect of Al2(SO4)3 on the flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite.
Figure 4. Effect of Al2(SO4)3 on the flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite.
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Figure 5. Effect of pH (a) and concentration (b) of SS on the flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite.
Figure 5. Effect of pH (a) and concentration (b) of SS on the flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite.
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Figure 6. Effect of the mass ratio between Al2(SO4)3 to SS to the flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite.
Figure 6. Effect of the mass ratio between Al2(SO4)3 to SS to the flotation recovery of cassiterite and calcite.
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Figure 7. The species distribution diagram of Al3+(a) and the distribution coefficient of water glass (b) as a function of pH.
Figure 7. The species distribution diagram of Al3+(a) and the distribution coefficient of water glass (b) as a function of pH.
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Figure 8. Effect of pH on the zeta potential of cassiterite (a) and calcite (b) in different systems.
Figure 8. Effect of pH on the zeta potential of cassiterite (a) and calcite (b) in different systems.
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Figure 9. Amount of NaOL adsorbed on the surface of minerals as a function of the depressant concentration (a) SS and (b) AlSS.
Figure 9. Amount of NaOL adsorbed on the surface of minerals as a function of the depressant concentration (a) SS and (b) AlSS.
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Figure 10. Amount of Al3+ adsorbed on the surface of minerals as a function of AlSS concentration.
Figure 10. Amount of Al3+ adsorbed on the surface of minerals as a function of AlSS concentration.
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Figure 11. Schematic diagram of contact angle measurement.
Figure 11. Schematic diagram of contact angle measurement.
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Figure 12. Contact angle of cassiterite (a) and calcite (b) in different systems.
Figure 12. Contact angle of cassiterite (a) and calcite (b) in different systems.
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Figure 13. Survey scan XPS spectra of cassiterite (a) and calcite (b) before and after AlSS treatment.
Figure 13. Survey scan XPS spectra of cassiterite (a) and calcite (b) before and after AlSS treatment.
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Figure 14. Sn and Ca XPS analysis of cassiterite (a,b) and calcite (c,d) before and after AlSS treatment.
Figure 14. Sn and Ca XPS analysis of cassiterite (a,b) and calcite (c,d) before and after AlSS treatment.
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Figure 15. Schematic illustration of the selective flotation process.
Figure 15. Schematic illustration of the selective flotation process.
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Table 1. Flotation results of mixed minerals (pH = 8.5, NaOL = 0.2 mM, AlSS = 80 mg/L).
Table 1. Flotation results of mixed minerals (pH = 8.5, NaOL = 0.2 mM, AlSS = 80 mg/L).
ReagentsProductsYield (%)SnO2 Grade (%)SnO2 Recovery (%)
NaOL (0.2 mM)Concentrate85.5746.6582.27
Tailing14.4359.6117.73
Feed10048.52100
NaOL (0.2 mM)
SS (80 mg/L)
Concentrate69.5257.3482.07
Tailing30.4828.5717.93
Feed10048.57100
NaOL (0.2 mM)
AlSS (80 mg/L)
Concentrate45.5682.3477.38
Tailing54.4320.1522.62
Feed10048.49100
Table 2. Atomic concentrations and the shifts of elements on the calcite surface.
Table 2. Atomic concentrations and the shifts of elements on the calcite surface.
ElementsConditionsShift
CalciteCalcite + AlSS
Concentration (%)Ca 2p13.927.84−6.08
O 1S41.7746.684.91
C 1S44.3134.58−9.73
Si 2p-6.28+6.28
Al 2p-4.64+4.64
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Zhao, G.; Zhu, D. Enhanced Flotation Separation of Cassiterite from Calcite Using Metal-Inorganic Complex Depressant. Minerals 2021, 11, 880. https://doi.org/10.3390/min11080880

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Zhao G, Zhu D. Enhanced Flotation Separation of Cassiterite from Calcite Using Metal-Inorganic Complex Depressant. Minerals. 2021; 11(8):880. https://doi.org/10.3390/min11080880

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Zhao, Guanfei, and Dongmei Zhu. 2021. "Enhanced Flotation Separation of Cassiterite from Calcite Using Metal-Inorganic Complex Depressant" Minerals 11, no. 8: 880. https://doi.org/10.3390/min11080880

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