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Process Utilities

Slurry Density Explained

What slurry density is, why it differs from liquid density, how mass percent and volume percent solids relate to it, and why it matters for pumps, pipes, tanks, and mass balance.

TypeEngineering guide — concept explainer

Definition

Slurry density is the bulk density of a mixture of solid particles suspended in a liquid — the total mass of the slurry divided by its total volume. Because the solids are denser than the carrier liquid, the slurry density sits between the liquid density and the solids density, rising as the solids loading increases. It is set by three things: the liquid density (ρ_L), the solids density (ρ_S), and how much solid is present, expressed either as mass fraction (Xs, often called Cw) or volume fraction (Cv).

Why it matters

Slurry density is the master variable that ties a slurry stream together. Pump head and power scale directly with it — a slurry pump moving 1230 kg/m³ fluid does far more work than one on clean water. Pipe velocity must stay above the deposition velocity, which depends on density and solids loading. Tank and thickener residence time, dewatering duty, and instrument calibration (Marcy cup, Corislis, nuclear gauge) all reference it. And every slurry mass balance starts by converting a measured volumetric flow and density into solids and liquid mass flows. Get the density wrong and every downstream number is wrong.

Formula

From mass fraction solids (Xs)
ρ_slurry = 1 / (Xs / ρ_S + (1 − Xs) / ρ_L)
From volume fraction solids (Cv)
ρ_slurry = Cv × ρ_S + (1 − Cv) × ρ_L
Volume fraction from mass fraction
Cv = (Xs / ρ_S) / (Xs / ρ_S + (1 − Xs) / ρ_L)
Mass fraction from volume fraction
Xs = (Cv × ρ_S) / ρ_slurry

Units involved

  • ρ_slurry, ρ_L, ρ_S — densities in kg/m³ (or g/cm³, lb/ft³)
  • Xs — solids mass fraction (0–1) or mass percent solids ×100 (Cw)
  • Cv — solids volume fraction (0–1) or volume percent solids ×100
  • Specific gravity (SG) — density relative to water (dimensionless)

Concept diagram

Liquid1000 kg/m³+Solids2650 kg/m³=Slurry30 wt% solids≈ 1230 kg/m³ρ_slurry = 1 / (Xs/ρ_S + (1−Xs)/ρ_L)

Worked example

A quartz-like mineral slurry: liquid (water) 1000 kg/m³, solids 2650 kg/m³, 30% solids by mass. Find the slurry density and the volume fraction of solids.

  1. 01Xs = 0.30
  2. 02ρ_slurry = 1 / (0.30 / 2650 + 0.70 / 1000)
  3. 03ρ_slurry = 1 / (0.0001132 + 0.0007000) ≈ 1229.6 kg/m³
  4. 04Cv = (0.30 / 2650) / 0.0008132 ≈ 0.139
Result

Slurry density ≈ 1229.6 kg/m³, and only ~13.9% of the volume is solids even though 30% of the mass is.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming the slurry density equals the liquid density — it is always higher when solids are denser than the liquid.
  • Treating mass percent and volume percent as the same number — for dense minerals they differ by more than 2×.
  • Using clean-water density (1000 kg/m³) for pump and pipe calculations on a real slurry.
  • Forgetting that dissolved salts raise the liquid density — use the measured liquor density, not plain water.
  • Believing density alone characterises the slurry — it says nothing about rheology, yield stress, or settling.

When to use the calculator

Use the Slurry Density Calculator to compute ρ_slurry from the liquid density, solids density, and percent solids (mass or volume), and to convert between the two percent-solids bases. Then use the Slurry Mass Balance Calculator to turn a measured volumetric flow and density into solids and liquid mass flows.

FAQ

Why does slurry density differ from the liquid density?
Because the suspended solids are denser than the carrier liquid. Adding dense solid particles to a fixed volume raises the mass, so the bulk density climbs above the liquid value toward the solids value as loading increases.
Does density tell me whether the slurry will settle or pump well?
No. Density is necessary but not sufficient. Settling depends on particle size, shape, and concentration; pumpability depends on rheology (yield stress, viscosity) and deposition velocity. Two slurries with identical density can behave very differently.
How does slurry density relate to specific gravity (SG)?
SG is the density relative to water at a reference temperature, so SG ≈ ρ_slurry / 1000 when ρ is in kg/m³. A slurry at 1230 kg/m³ has an SG of about 1.23. Marcy cups and many field instruments read SG directly.
What solids density should I use for minerals?
Use the measured dry solids SG for your ore. Common approximations: quartz/silica ~2.65, hematite ~5.2, magnetite ~5.1, common rock/tailings 2.6–2.9. For design, measure it — mineral blends vary.

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