The document summarizes a book on principles of mineral processing. It covers topics like particle characterization, size reduction, separation techniques, and economics of the minerals industry. The review notes it is a comprehensive textbook that covers all areas of mineral processing in a systematic way.
The document summarizes a book on principles of mineral processing. It covers topics like particle characterization, size reduction, separation techniques, and economics of the minerals industry. The review notes it is a comprehensive textbook that covers all areas of mineral processing in a systematic way.
Book reviews / Minerals Engineering 18 (2005) 905907
Maurice C. Fuerstenau, Kenneth N. Han (Eds.). Principles
of Mineral Processing, Society for Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration, Littleton, CO, ISBN 0-87335-167-3, x + 573 pages, 18.2 3 26 cm, hard cover, www.smenet. org, US$ 124 This is a collective work by 16 US authors, 2 Canadians, 1 Australian, and only one European from Bulgariaa total of 20. So it can be said that the book reects the North American English Speaking expertise. It covers particle characterization, size reduction and liberation, size separation, movement of solids in liquids, gravity concentration, magnetic and electrostatic separation, otation, liquidsolid separation, metallurgical balances and eciency, bulk solids handling, hydrometallurgy and solution kinetics, mineral processing wastes and their remediation, and economics of the minerals industry. Thus it covers all areas of mineral processing in a systematic way. According to the editors in their introduction to the work, the book is meant to be a textbook for students and a reference work for professionals in industry. This goal was certainly fullled. I would even add that it is an advanced textbook for graduate students and for senior professionals in industry. Each of the fourteen chapters is well documented by a long list of literature citations with full title of the references, and the index is well prepared in 13 pages. Figures and diagrams are clear and the book in general is very well produced. It would have been a good idea if the authors had referred to the Handbook of Mineral Processing published in 1985 by SME in their introduction so that there could be a continuation in the publications policy. Certainly the Handbook is still an important document in this domain. doi:10.1016/j.mineng.2005.05.008
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The number of pages per chapter is usually about 50,
and a few about 20. While the chapter devoted to hydrometallurgy is the largest in 76 pages. Traditionally hydrometallurgy and aqueous electrometallurgy are considered a part of mineral processing although the domains are now very well established as independent elds. While chapter 8 (Flotation) is comprehensive and up to date, chapter 4 (Size Separation) is very well presented but the latest reference cited in 1986. Similarly chapter 5 (Movement of Solids in Liquids) the latest reference cited is 1984. The chapter entitled Hydrometallurgy and Solution Kinetics (chapter 12) includes a good summary of the work by Han and co-workers published in the 1990s but also suers from the absence of recent publications in the eld by other authors. Further it is based heavily on chemical engineering books, e.g. Bird et al. (1962), Smith (1970), Levenspiel (1972), Geiger and Poirier (1973), Sherwood et al. (1975), as well as standard works on thermodynamics such as Kubaschewski and Evans (1979). The book is an excellent present to the mineral beneciation community and is highly recommended. The editors and authors are to be congratulated for this magnicent eort. Fathi Habashi Departement de genie des mines de la metallurgie et des materiaux Faculte des sciences et de genie Universite Laval, Quebec, Canada G1K 7P4 Tel.: +1 418 656 7269; fax: +1 418 656 5343 E-mail address: [email protected] Available online 13 June 2005