Bond Work Index Explained
What the Bond Work Index is, what F80 and P80 mean, and how Bond’s Third-Theory equation links specific grinding energy to a supplied work index — forward (Wi → W) and reverse (W → operating Wi). Explains why a supplied Wi or measured W matters, and why this is not a grindability test or mill-design method.
Definition
The Bond Work Index (Wi) is a material property — the energy, in kilowatt-hours per tonne, that characterises how resistant an ore is to comminution under Bond's Third Theory of Comminution (Bond, 1952). Bond's Third Theory states that the specific grinding energy W required to reduce a feed from an 80%-passing size F80 to an 80%-passing product size P80 follows W = 10 · Wi · (1/√P80 − 1/√F80), with the sizes in micrometres and W and Wi in kWh/t. F80 and P80 are the sieve sizes through which 80% of the feed and product pass respectively — the standard single-number descriptors of a size distribution. The ProcessConvert Bond calculator works this equation two ways: forward, it computes the specific energy W from a work index you supply and your F80/P80; in reverse, it back-calculates an operating (apparent) work index Wi,op from a measured specific energy and the two sizes. In both cases the work index is something you bring to the calculation — from a grindability test or the literature — not something the calculator predicts.
Why it matters
The reason this page exists is to police one boundary: calculating with the Bond equation is not the same as determining a work index. A true Bond Work Index comes from a standardised Bond locked-cycle ball-mill (or rod-mill) grindability test run on your ore — a laboratory procedure this calculator describes but does not replicate. Supplying a Wi and computing W gives a preliminary, uncorrected energy estimate; measuring W and back-calculating Wi,op gives an operating work index that bundles in real-circuit inefficiencies. Neither is an ore-specific guarantee, and neither sizes a mill. Bond's classical method also uses Rowland's EF1–EF8 efficiency factors to correct the energy for dry grinding, mill diameter, oversize feed, fineness, and so on — this calculator names those factors but deliberately does not apply them, so its output is the raw equation value only. That matters because the gap between a textbook energy estimate and a mill specification is exactly where testwork, vendor methods, and qualified engineering belong. Getting the supplied-Wi-versus-measured-W distinction right, and not mistaking either for a grindability test or a mill-sizing result, is the whole point.
Formula
Units involved
- •Wi — Bond work index, kWh/t (supplied from a test or the literature)
- •W — specific grinding energy, kWh/t
- •F80 — 80% passing feed size, micrometres (µm)
- •P80 — 80% passing product size, micrometres (µm); must be smaller than F80
- •Wi,op — operating / apparent work index, kWh/t (back-calculated from measured W)
Concept diagram
Worked example
An ore with a supplied Bond work index Wi = 14 kWh/t is ground from F80 = 2000 µm to P80 = 106 µm. Estimate the specific energy, then confirm the reverse calculation.
- 011/√P80 = 1/√106 = 0.097129; 1/√F80 = 1/√2000 = 0.022361
- 02Size term: 1/√P80 − 1/√F80 = 0.074769
- 03Forward: W = 10 × 14 × 0.074769 = 10.47 kWh/t
- 04Reverse check: Wi,op = 10.47 / (10 × 0.074769) = 14.00 kWh/t
- 05Read W as a preliminary, uncorrected energy estimate — no efficiency factors applied, no mill sized
W ≈ 10.47 kWh/t from a supplied Wi = 14 kWh/t; the reverse recovers Wi,op = 14.00 kWh/t — the published equation only, not a grindability test or mill sizing.
Common mistakes
- •Believing the calculator determines your ore’s work index — Wi is an input you supply, not an output it predicts.
- •Mistaking the calculation for a Bond locked-cycle grindability test (the lab procedure that yields a true Wi).
- •Using the raw W to size or select a mill — no Rowland EF1–EF8 efficiency factors are applied.
- •Putting F80 or P80 in millimetres — the equation as written needs micrometres.
- •Applying the equation far outside Bond’s conventional rod/ball-mill size range and trusting the number.
- •Treating an operating work index back-calculated from one measurement as a fixed ore property.
When to use the calculator
Use the Bond Work Index calculator in the forward direction when you have a work index (from a Bond test or the literature) and want a preliminary specific-energy estimate for an F80→P80 reduction. Use the reverse direction when you have a measured specific energy and the two sizes and want the operating (apparent) work index of a running circuit. Pair it with the reduction ratio calculator, which shares F80/P80. For a true ore work index use a Bond grindability test; for a mill specification use vendor methods, efficiency-factor corrections, and qualified review.
FAQ
Does this calculator determine my ore’s Bond Work Index?
What is the difference between the work index and the specific grinding energy?
What do F80 and P80 mean?
Why are no efficiency factors applied?
Is the Bond Third-Theory equation valid for any ore and any size?
Related calculators
Related conversions
Related guides
Built and reviewed by a practising process engineer. About ProcessConvert →