“…There are four contributions on the development of online sensors, simulators, and models to define the machine designs and operating strategies: (i) a correlation between froth water content and water overflow rate [1], (ii) a correlation between gas holdup and flotation performance, which demonstrated that the former captured the combined effect of gas rate and frother concentration [2], (iii) a demonstration of a model reliability to predict bubble size from gas velocity and holdup measurements [3], and (iv) a simulation tool that incorporated gas dispersion, which proved the potential of changing the launder designs to improve flotation performances [4]. Bubble size measurement was another area with three contributions: the effect on interfacial area by considering stereological corrections in the bubble size estimation from 2D images [5], the increase in the automatically identified bubbles by modifying the sampling devices to reduce the presence of clusters [6], and the detection of abnormal hydrodynamic conditions (presence of cap-shaped bubbles) in industrial flotation machines [7]. An option for increasing the formation of bubble-particle aggregates is the use of micro and nanobubbles: a review on the generation, detection, and applications of nanobubbles in flotation was included in this volume [8], along with a study on the potential of bulk micro-nano-bubbles to improve quartz recovery [9].…”