Purpose-built ferrosilicon: getting the spec right first time
Industry professionals know that when ferrosilicon doesn’t meet spec, operations suffer. Whether you’re fine-tuning cut density in a DMS plant or running continuous deoxidation in steelmaking, your material inputs need to behave predictably.
Ferrosilicon may be a commodity on paper, but in practice, it’s a precision material. The difference between a stable media circuit and a problem-riddled one often lies in grain size distribution, shape consistency, and how clean the alloy is.
Precision in Dense Media Separation for Diamonds
In the diamond industry, ferrosilicon is not just part of the Dense Media Separation circuit — it’s the backbone of the separation process. With recovery margins often linked to fractions of specific gravity, any deviation in ferrosilicon quality directly impacts performance.
Diamond-bearing ore is typically crushed and pre-screened before entering a dense media separation unit. The goal: float out the gangue and retain the denser kimberlitic or lamproitic material that potentially carries diamonds.
How ferrosilicon enables DMS performance
To create a stable and controllable separating medium, ferrosilicon powder is mixed with water to a specific gravity between 2.6 and 3.4, depending on the ore body and target cut density. Atomised ferrosilicon — due to its round shape and predictable density — is preferred here. It offers:
- High sink-float resolution — helping operators isolate mineral concentrate zones
- Low degradation and fines generation — ensuring repeat cycles without sludging
- Efficient magnetic recovery — essential for recapturing ferrosilicon post-separation
- Stable rheology — enabling consistent medium viscosity and flow under varying loads
In a diamond plant, even a small shift in medium density can allow waste to contaminate concentrate streams, or worse — result in loss of recoverable stones.
Operational risks of sub-par ferrosilicon
If your ferrosilicon shows poor solubility characteristics or breaks down into fines under mechanical stress, you’re likely to see:
- Media bleed — ferrosilicon lost with tailings or concentrate
- Inconsistent cut points — lowering confidence in recovery
- Increased media make-up costs — due to frequent dosing
- Excessive magnet load — decreasing magnet recovery efficiency
These issues compound over multiple shifts, cutting into plant performance KPIs like recovery rate, operating cost per tonne, and availability.
Matching grade to performance
In high-recovery diamond plants, ferrosilicon grades like Atomised 15D or 270 are commonly used. These offer:
- Narrow particle distribution for density control
- Low dust and fines levels
- Optimised magnetic susceptibility for recovery
- Superior recyclability over long campaigns
Suppliers like DMS Powders manufacture these exact grades locally, offering both bulk availability and technical advice to fine-tune media behaviour in real time. Their experience with diamond recovery circuits throughout Southern Africa gives process engineers and plant managers access to real-world performance data and tested dosing strategies.





