Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Barite

 Barite

(Baryte)




Formula and Classification:

  • BaSO4 (barium sulfate)









Unique Characteristics of Barite:

  • High specific gravity of 4.50 g/cm3
  • Chemically inert
  • Water insoluble
  • Found in a variety of colors:
    • Yellow
    • Brown
    • White
    • Blue
    • Gray
    • Colorless


Occurrence and Abundance:

  • Very common and naturally occurring
  • Found in deposits with both metallic and nonmetallic minerals
  • Normally found in vein, residual, and bedded deposits
    • Vein and residual deposits are hydrothermal in origin
    • Bedded deposits are sedimentary
      • Often forms in concretions and veins in limestone and dolostone
      • Also found as concretions in sand and sandstone
        • Crystals of barite can grow into shapes called barite roses
  •  Primary countries with commercial deposits are the United States, China, India, and Morocco
  • Major deposits in the US are found in Georgia, Missouri, Nevada, and Tennessee
  • Other Major deposits are found in:
    • Canada
      • Yukon Territory, Nova Scotia,  and Newfoundland
    • Mexico
      • Hermosillo, Pueblo, Monterrey, and Durango













Uses of Barite:

  • Mostly used in oil drilling industry as a drilling mud
    • Barite is crushed and added to mud to create barium mud
    • Mud is pumped down the drill stem
      • Keeps drilling equipment cool and lubricated and keeps pressure level
  • Most of us encounter barite in radiology for x-rays of the digestive system
    • Barite is X-ray absorbent
      • Makes characteristics of the gastrointestinal tract visible
  • Used to make high density concrete 
    • Blocks X-ray emissions in hospitals, power plants, and laboratories
  • Main ore of the element barium
  • Filler in paper and rubber
  • Crushed and used to create white paint
 

Obtaining Barite:  

  • Most mining industries use the open-pit method to mine barite 
  • Depending on the barite deposit, eliminating waste material can be difficult
    • In a residual deposit most of the material is waste
        • As current mining equipment cannot separate the clay waste from barite, ore-bearing waste is mined and then sent  to a processing plant.
          • A bedded deposit with thinly bedded shale, chert, or argillite is also treated in this manner.
  • Deposits of barite that is both pure and large enough can be mined and meet quality specifications without further processing.

  Barite Processing:

  • There are several processes for separating barite from waste material
    • Hand selection
    • Screens--removes some clay and fine-grained material
    • Washing--removes large amounts of waste material
    • Jigs--pulsates water to separate materials by weight (barite should sink to the bottom)
    • Tables and spirals--specific gravity and material movement separates waste from barite
    • Flotation--chemical is used to make waste product or barite float to top
  •  Depending on size, the ore-bearing waste must sometimes be crushed into smaller pieces first

 

Environmental and Health Considerations:

  • Minerals associated with barite mining and processing are the main concern, not the barite itself
    • Barite is a chemically inert and nontoxic mineral
    • Quartz, present in many barite deposits, can create silica dust (a lung carcinogen)
      • Dust masks may be required during mining and processing to prevent inhalation
      • Water may be used to reduce the amount of silica dust in the air
    • Unoxidized minerals may be present with barite deposits
      • Acid mine drainage can result
        • Contaminate water sources
        • Cause mineral leachage












Life Cycle of Barite

  • Naturally occurring mineral that undergoes the natural process of weathering
  • Is used in such a way to make it very difficult to recycle, but in some cases it is still possible
    • A centrifuge can be used to separate barite from drilling mud


To learn more about Barite recycling click on this link.