as slurried end-products, there is also an increasing requirement for dry product forms.
Some key minerals, which occur naturally as wet deposits, may be processed direct from the earth, such as ball clays, bentonite, kaolin and kaolinitic clays etc. Where purity, colour or abrasive impurities are not an issue, direct processing by drying and milling, often simultaneously, yields a saleable product for more basic applications.
To avoid back mixing, typically required to make the clay feedable, these "fresh from the ground" clays are often spread out to partially dry in the air if conditions are suitable, before finish drying, milling and classification.
Other mineral slurries are produced as a by-product, eg. From the quarrying of marble where blocks of marble are cut either by water jet or by water lubricated saws. The resultant fine suspension of marble particles can easily be simultaneously dried and de-agglomerated in a high energy mill-drying system. It is either back-mixed to produce a wet crumble or, if pumpable, sprayed directly into the mill-dryer.
Mill-dryers are available with integral classifiers to control the particle size of the dried powder leaving the dryer. There is a limit to the effectiveness of such integral classifiers whereby an independent unit may prove to be more efficient.
A key reason for the requirement of drying of minerals is that often, in order to achieve ultra-fine PSD's, it is wet grinding that offers the most cost effective process route, leaving the mineral as a suspension in water. Where possible, if the mineral does not require any beneficiation, this processing can be at relatively high solids content (>70%), typically assisted by chemical dispersing aids.