Further testing confirms pig iron potential of Baobab’s Moz play

11th April 2014 By: Natalie Greve - Creamer Media Contributing Editor Online

Further testing confirms pig iron potential of Baobab’s Moz play

Photo by: Bloomberg

JOHANNESBURG (miningweekly.com) – Mozambique-focused Baobab Resources says a second round of bench-scale beneficiation, reduction and smelting tests of oxidised iron-ore at its project in the Tete province has “again” demonstrated that a low-impurity pig iron product can be achieved.

This second phase of beneficiation and pyrometallurgical studies followed on from prior prefeasibility study testwork on a representative sample of the oxidised iron-ore, which dominated the upper portions of the Tenge resource block and would constitute plant feed for the initial years of operation.

The resultant oxide concentrate reported a grade of 50.1% iron, 0.73% vanadium oxide and 17.6% titanium dioxide at a mass recovery of 67%.

A final iron alloy containing 99% iron was produced after refining and was significantly purer than the specification of a commercial pig-iron product.

Critically, the experiments demonstrated that both titanium and vanadium could be removed from the pig iron into separate slag by-products.

The testwork further confirmed the suitability of three sources of local thermal coal from two commercial operations and one indevelopment project in the immediate Tete project area, achieving at least 85%, and up to 93%, metallisation in the reduction process.

Pilot-scale reduction tests on the bulk samples of Tenge oxide iron-ore, Massamba carbonate and local thermal coal product were scheduled to start this month.

Commenting in a statement on Friday, MD Ben James said the second round of pyrometallurgical results confirmed the company's conviction that a high-quality, low-impurity pig iron could be produced from Baobab's iron-ore resources and locally sourced thermal coal.

“Importantly, the testwork also demonstrates the clean removal of titanium to the slag and that vanadium can also be separately liberated. Larger-scale testwork will clarify the specifications of both by-products,” he said.

Baobab was currently completing a bankable feasibility study at its pig iron and ferrovanadium project, in the Tete province.

The International Finance Corporation held a 15% participatory interest in the project.