Structure of a Property Based Simulator for Minerals and Metallurgical Industry (original) (raw)

Computer aided design and optimization of mineral processing plants by a state of the art simulator

2002

Tata Research Development and Design Centre (TRDDC) has developed a state of the art mineral processing simulator called SimL8. Jr performs modelling, simulation and optimisation functions and provides viable strategies for enhancement of the performance of mineral processing plants. A number of case studies on plant diagnostics, grinding, classification, flotation and pressure filtration are taken up to demonstrate the utility of modelling and simulation on SimL8 platform.

Simulation-Driven Development for Coarse Comminution Process - a Case Study of Geita Gold Mine, Tanzania Using Plantsmith Process Simulator

Proceedings of the Design Society, 2021

A comminution process is a material size reduction and separation process which is primarily used in the aggregates and the minerals processing industry. Knowledge related to equipment’s operation, raw material properties, operational strategies, control system, maintenance, etc. is needed to design a capable plant. New needs are arising from the industry for existing operational crushing plants such as investigation for improvements, upscaling, and downscaling of the capacity. The paper presents an application of simulation-driven development for a crushing plant in an existing gold processing plant. Due to the change in ore characteristics and the need for optimizing the cost of operation, it is required to investigate the opportunities for improvement and alternative options for downscaling the capacity of the plant. A systematic process for configuring, developing, and evaluating alternative concepts using a process simulation tool is presented. The results show the process of g...

Development of an Object-Oriented Programming Tool Based on FEM for Numerical Simulation of Mineral-Slurry Transport

Computational Science – ICCS 2020, 2020

The early stages of the development of a finite element method (FEM) based computational tool for numerically simulating mineral-slurry transport involving both Newtonian and non-Newtonian flows are described in this work. The rationale behind the conception, design and implementation of the referred object-oriented programming tool is thus initially highlighted. A particular emphasis is put on several architectural aspects accounted for and object class hierarchies defined during the development of the tool. Next one of the main modules composing the tool under development is further described. Finally, as a means of illustration, the use of the FEM based tool for simulating two-dimensional laminar flows is discussed. More specifically, canonical configurations widely studied in the past are firstly accounted for. A more practical application involving the simulation of a mineral-slurry handling device is then studied using the power-law rheological model. The results from the simu...