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Sonic Pulses and Emissions for Analyzing Rock comminution (SPEAR)

Important results from the project

The project met its goals and showed that AE–UPV technology can serve as a non-destructive alternative for assessing rock grindability. Through UPV, XCT, and hardness tests, correlations between material properties and measurable signals were identified. The results have led to new collaborations and strong prospects for further development and industry implementation.

Expected long term effects

In the long term, AE–UPV could be established as a standardized, non-destructive method for assessing grindability directly from drill cores. This may reduce costly testing, enable faster decisions, improve resource efficiency, and lower environmental impact. The created network increases the chances of broad adoption.

Approach and implementation

The project was delayed at the start due to delivery times for instruments and equipment. Once delivered, we built and installed the bench-scale AE–UPV setup and carried out the tests. Other activities followed the plan, collaboration worked well, and the project achieved its goals.

The text has been written by the project team. The content is copied from the funding agency’s website and has not been reviewed by the Program Office.

Project title
Sonic Pulses and Emissions for Analyzing Rock comminution (SPEAR)
Registration number
2024-02655
Coordinator
Luleå University of Technology - Inst för samhällsbygg & naturresurser
Call
2024-01480 Impact Innovation: Feasibility studies within Technological Action Areas in the program Metals & Minerals
Project duration
November 2024 - June 2025
Project type
Feasibility study
Responsible funding agency
Vinnova

For further information about the project, please visit Vinnova