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Pan Asia’s ore sorting proves a winner with doubling of Reung Kiet grade

Special Report: Pan Asia’s ore sorting testwork has highlighted the excellent amendability of Reung Kiet lithium mineralisation to this low-cost ……

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Pan Asia’s ore sorting testwork has highlighted the excellent amendability of Reung Kiet lithium mineralisation to this low-cost method of increasing mill grade.

Crushed drill core samples from the project in southern Thailand demonstrated exceptional recovery of separate highgrade dyke and vein material from lower grade/waste siltstone after undergoing 3D laser and colour sorting at Steinert Australia.

Pan Asia Metals (ASX:PAM) noted that the results indicate about 73% lithium recovery while discarding 61% of the feed, which is generally waste siltstone with grades well below the resource cut-off grade of 0.25% Li2O.

The reduction of mass by 61% and the near doubling of lithium grade from 0.48% Li2O to approximately 0.9% Li2O is expected to deliver substantial processing cost savings.

 

Increasing mill feed grade

Managing director Paul Lock noted that the company had considered ore sorting as a way to increase mill feed grade back in June 2022 when it released its maiden resource for Reung Kiet.

“Steinhart Australia’s ore sorting test-work has demonstrated the ability to uplift the head grade to the beneficiation plant, in this case almost doubling the grade to >0.90% Li2O, which means that we would be processing a higher grade ore than that reflected in our MRE,” he added.

“This is a fantastic outcome and we expect it will result in capital and operating cost savings as we will require less beneficiation capacity – lower capex – and we will be processing less product – lower opex.”

pan asia metals asx:pam ore
Reung Kiet ore sorting results. Pic: Supplied

 

Ore Sorting

The crushed drill sample, which demonstrated good physical separation of purple-white pegmatite from the dark grey to black coloured siltstone, fed in a single-pass into Steinhart’s ore sorted and subjected to 3D laser scanning and colour camera sensors used in combination.

This produced excellent separation of the mineralised aplo-pegmatite from the low grade to waste siltstone.

Data from the sorted ore found that -50mm, +10mm pegmatite and mixed -10mm fines samples constitute about 39% of the sample yield and contain around 73% of the contained lithium.

Meanwhile, the siltstone sample constitutes about 61% of sample yield but only 27% of contained lithium, and almost all of this is below the Mineral Resource cut-off grade of 0.25% Li2O and hence is not really a loss.

The results clearly demonstrates that the sampled mineralisation is highly amenable to ore sorting which results in the separation of the material into essentially homogeneous aplo-pegmatite with little siltstone contamination and siltstone with little pegmatite.

 

This article was developed in collaboration with Pan Asia Metals, a Stockhead advertiser at the time of publishing.

This article does not constitute financial product advice. You should consider obtaining independent advice before making any financial decisions.

The post Pan Asia’s ore sorting proves a winner with doubling of Reung Kiet grade appeared first on Stockhead.


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