re: Ann: LCY: Legacy Joint Venture to Develop... Hi RONRAINEYou...

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    re: Ann: LCY: Legacy Joint Venture to Develop... Hi RONRAINE

    You got me thinking about the inherent differences between Magnetite and Haematite.
    I found the following article that explains the differences.
    What is nice to learn is the fact that the higher cost of treating Magnetite is offset by the higher grades of the finished product, and that magnetite is becoming more and more sought after as high grade Haematite is becoming harder to source.

    Cheers

    Commy

    Karara Iron Ore Project

    Regional Exploration

    Magnetite vs. Hematite

    Magnetite vs. Hematite
    Hematite
    Traditionally, the Australian iron ore industry has been based on the mining, production and export of high-grade hematite ores which currently account for approximately 96% of Australias iron ore production.

    High-grade hematite is often referred to as Direct Shipping Ore or DSO because it is mined and beneficiated using a relatively simple crushing and screening process before being exported for use in steel mills.

    Magnetite
    Magnetite ore has lower iron content and must be upgraded to make it suitable for steelmaking.

    Magnetite ore is suitable for processing into iron ore pellets for use in modern steel production and currently accounts for approximately 50% of global iron ore production. The magnetic properties of magnetite enable it to be readily refined into an iron ore concentrate.
    While magnetite is generally a lower-grade deposit, it is globally accepted as a viable and high-quality feedstock for the production of premium quality, low impurity steel.

    The processing route for magnetite requires crushing, screening, grinding, magnetic separation, filtering and drying. The final product is a high iron grade magnetite concentrate (+65% Fe), with typically very low impurities.

    Further processing involves the agglomeration and thermal treatment of the concentrate to produce pellets, which can be used directly in a blast furnace or direct reduction steel-making plant.

    The additional processing cost for the production of magnetite concentrate can be offset by the premium price which it attracts from steel mills because of the high iron content compared to benchmark DSO hematite products.

    Magnetite the Future of Australian Iron Ore.
    Traditionally, Australia has associated iron ore with DSO quality hematite, which underpinned by emergence of the Pilbara region as one of the worlds great iron ore provinces. As a result, magnetite has been greatly misunderstood and undervalued by the market.

    Because it has lower iron content than hematite, magnetite has been regarded in Australia as a less attractive proposition.However, the availability of cheaper energy combined with the requirement for premium quality ore is changing this perspective.Magnetite projects today are capable of producing high-quality concentrate grading up to 68-69% Fe, which is higher grade than many of the Pilbara hematite lump and fines ores currently being produced.

    Also, it is well established that hematite grades are declining globally and impurity levels are rising while the demand for quality, premium steel from China and India is continuing to increase. With hematite grades declining, high-grade magnetite concentrate is becoming an increasingly sought-after product.

    Steel mills are now buying increasing volumes of high-grade, low impurity magnetite concentrate to supplement declining supplies of high-grade lump ore, in order to maintain the quality of their final product.

    Here is the link

    http://www.gindalbie.com.au/Our+Projects/Magnetite+vs.+Hematite/default.aspx
 
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