Minerals Separation, Ltd. v. Miami Copper Co.

237 F. 609, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedSeptember 29, 1916
DocketNo. 331
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 237 F. 609 (Minerals Separation, Ltd. v. Miami Copper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minerals Separation, Ltd. v. Miami Copper Co., 237 F. 609, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232 (D. Del. 1916).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

The bill in this suit was brought by the Minerals Separation, Limited, a corporation of Great Britain, against the Miami Copper Company, a corporation of Delaware, charging infringement of three United States process patents relating to ore concentration, owned by the plaintiff, namely, No. 835,120, of November 6, 1906, to H. F. Sulman, H. F. Kirkpatrick-Picard and J. Ballot, No. 962,678, of June 28, 1910, to H. L. Sulman, H. H. Greenway and A. H. Higgins, and No. 1,099,699, of June 9, 1914, to H. PI. Greenway, assignor to the plaintiff.

Under the processes shown in the three patents a signal advance has been made in the art of ore concentration in point of simplicity, economy and efficiency, and in their practice large commercial success has been realized. Ore concentration in metallurgical operations is the [610]*610separation of the metalliferous or metallic part of the ore from the non-metallic and worthless material, known as gangue, found associated with it in nature, in order that the valuable mineral or metallic particles may be in proper condition for the subsequent process of smelting. The ores to which the process of the patents in suit are applicable are mainly chemical compounds of metal and sulphuf, copper sulphides, zinc sulphides, or lead sulphides. Prior to the invention or rather discovery covered by the first patent in suit ore concentration had assumed a number of forms differing from one another in the principle of their operation, but all of them requiring, as do the processes now practiced, as an essential condition of the separation of the mineral from the gangue, the crushing or grinding of the ore into particles of such a degree of fineness as to produce useful results. The ore having been so crushed or ground was subjected to treatment to secure the desired concentration; such treatment varying, according to the particular process employed. In what was known as water or gravity concentration the ore was mixed with water forming the ore pulp, and through shaking or agitation of the pulp by well-known devices the metallic particles, becoming separated from the particles of gangue and having greater specific gravity than the water, sank to the bottom, while the particles of gangue, having less specific gravity than the mineral particles, although greater than that of the water, were subjected to an up-current, not strong enough to prevent the metallic particles from s,inking, but strong enough to carry the particles of gangue to the surface where they would escape over the edge of the containing vessel or be otherwise disposed of. Such processes, however, were far from commercially successful, being wasteful of water, of power and of a considerable proportion of the metallic particles in the slimes which were carried by the up-current to the surface and. were lost with the gangue. Without pausing at this point to consider other processes of ore concentration disclosed in the prior art, hereinafter discussed, an important and, indeed, vital .difference between water or gravity concentration under such processes as those above referred to, on the dne hand, and concentration under the processes of the patents in suit, is that while in the former the metallic particles after being separated from the gangue in the ore pulp sank to the bottom, in the latter the metallic particles coated with an extremely thin film of oil; become attached to air-bubbles in the ore pulp, and the bubbles with the attached metallic particles rise to the surface, forming a mineral froth of such coherency and permanency as to afford fun opportunity for its removal from the surface for further treatment of tire metallic particles. The ore pulp in the process of each and every of the three patents in suit consists of a mixture of water and crushed or pulverized mineral ore, together with one or more other ingredients. In each the agitation of the pulp coupled with the introduction of air into it develops and distributes throughout the mixture small bubbles of air which attach themselves to the metallic particles, to the exclusion of gangue, and rise with them and form a metallic air froth on the surface, reádily removable therefrom, the gangue particles sinking to the bottom and being disposed of qs refuse.

[611]*611[1] In the description of the first patent in suit, No. 835,120, for “Improvements in Ore Concentration” it is stated:

“This invention relates to improvements in the concentration of ores, the object being to separate metalliferous matter, graphite, and the like from gangue by means of oils, fatty acids, or other substances which have a preferential affinity for metalliferous matter over gangue. In the process described in the previous United States Patent, No. 777,273, granted to A. E. Oattermole, an amount of oil varying from four per cent, to six per cent, of the weight of metalliferous matter present is agitated with an ore pulp, so as to form granules which can be separated from the gangue. In the previous United States patent, No. 777,274, granted to A. E; Oattermole and others, a similar method of separation is employed, oleic acid being produced in situ in the ore pulp.
“We have found that if the proportion of oily substance be considerably reduced—say to a fraction of one per cent, on the ore—granulation ceases to take place, and after vigorous agitation there is a tendency for a part of the oil-coated metalliferous matter to rise to the surface of the pulp in the form of a froth or scum. This tendency is dependent on a number of factors. Thus the water in which the oiling is effected is preferably slightly acidified by adding, say, a fraction of one per cent, up to one per cent, of sulfuric acid or other mineral acid or acid salt, the effect of this acidity being to prevent gangue from being coated with oily substance, or, in other words, to render the selective action of the oil more marked; but it is to be understood that the object of using acid in the pulp according to this invention is not to bring about the generation of gas for the purpose of flotation thereby, and the proportion of acid used is insufficient to cause chemical action on the metalliferous minerals present. Again, we have discovered that the tendency for the oily substance to disseminate through the pulp and the rapidity with which the metalliferous matter becomes coated is increased if the pulp is warmed. .The formation of froth is assisted by the fine pulverization of the ore, and we find that slime mineral most readily generates scum and rises to the surface, while larger particles have less tendency to be included in the froth. The proportion of mineral which floats in the form of froth varies considerably with different ores and with different oily substances, and before utilizing the facts above mentioned in the concentration of any particular ore a simple preliminary test is necessary to determine which oily substance yields the proportion'-of froth or scum desired.
“The following is an example of the application of this invention to the concentration of a particular ore. An ore containing ferruginous blende, galena, and gangue consisting of quartz, rhodonite, and garnet is finely powdered and mixed with water containing a fraction of one per cent., or up to one per cent, of a mineral acid or acid salt, conveniently sulfuric acid or mine or other waters containing ferric sulfate.

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237 F. 609, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minerals-separation-ltd-v-miami-copper-co-ded-1916.