Artículo de revista
Change of support using non-additive variables with Gibbs Sampler: Application to metallurgical recovery of sulphide ores
Fecha
2019Registro en:
Computers and Geosciences, Volumen 122, 2019, Pages 68-76.
00983004
10.1016/j.cageo.2018.10.002
Autor
Garrido, Mauricio
Ortiz, Julian
Villaseca, Francisco
Kracht, Willy
Townley, Brian
Miranda, Roberto
Institución
Resumen
Flotation tests at laboratory scale describe the metallurgical behavior of the minerals that will be processed in the operational plant. This material is generally composed of ore and gangue minerals. These tests are usually scarce, expensive and sampled in large supports. This research proposes a methodology for the geostatistical modelling of metallurgical recovery, covering the change of support problems through additive auxiliary variables. The methodology consists of simulating these auxiliary variables using a Gibbs Sampler in order to infer the behavior of samples with smaller supports. This allows downscaling a large sample measurement into smaller ones, reproducing the variability at different scales considering the physical restrictions of additivity balance of the metallurgical recovery process. As a consequence, it is possible to apply conventional multivariate geostatistical tools to data at different supports, such as multivariable exploratory analysis, calculation of cross-variograms, multivariate estimations, among others. The methodology was tested using a drillhole database from an ore deposit, modelling recovery at a smaller support than that of the metallurgical tests. The support allowed for the use of the geochemical database, to consistently model the metal content in the feed and in the concentrate, in order to obtain a valid recovery model. Results show that downscaling the composite size reduces smoothing in the final model.