
Rio Tinto and The University of Queensland have announced the formation of the Rio Tinto Centre for Advanced Mineral Sorting to be located at the Julius Kruttschnitt Mineral Research Centre in Brisbane of Australia.
According to Mr Grant Thorne, himself an alumni of the Julius Kruttschnitt Mineral Research Centre and until very recently Rio Tinto's Group Executive for Technology and Innovation The USD 11 million Centre will focus on the development of advanced technologies for the separation and upgrading of important minerals, such as copper and nickel with increased energy efficiency. Today's announcement cements a long term research relationship between Rio Tinto and The University of Queensland. This Centre complements and integrates with our wider mine of the Future™ work.
Valuable metals such as copper and nickel are becoming increasingly hard to find and recover using traditional processing techniques. New copper deposits typically contain lower ore grades with more complex geology than those found in the past, making recovery of target minerals more costly and energy intensive.
Mr John McGagh Rio Tinto head of Innovation said that "The latest developments in advanced mineral detection systems and rapid data processing capability now make automated mineral sorting a very attractive processing option. Our work with The University of Queensland will develop state of the art approaches to sorting across a range of strategically important minerals."
Mr Ben Adair newly appointed director of the Rio Tinto Centre said that "Rio Tinto and The University of Queensland have a rich history of research collaboration and a long term commitment to the Centre solidifies this relationship."
He said that "The Centre has a mandate to explore the most innovative ideas in the field of mineral sorting and to work with Rio Tinto to develop them into new industry changing technologies. This new partnership is seen by both parties as an exciting opportunity to translate novel ideas into the state of the art in mineral sorting worldwide. We have already started to scale up one concept and more are planned."










