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Laboratory study of submerged metal-mine tailings 1: Effect of solid-liquid contact time and aeration on contaminant concentrations

Authors :
Richard D. Doepker
Pamela L. Drake
Source :
Mine Water and the Environment. 10:29-41
Publication Year :
1991
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1991.

Abstract

The dissolution of metals from various metal-mine tailings has been studied through a series of submerged tailings batch tests at U.S. Bureau of Mines laboratories. Tailings selected for this study included both reactive (as determined by column leaching studies) and benign tailings. Metal mobilization in aerated (97 pct saturated with oxygen) samples appeared to be consistently greater than metal dissolution from stagnant (79 pct or 70 pct saturated with oxygen) waters. In the early weeks of the study, sulfate concentrations increased with solid-liquid contact time, while calcium dissolution remained nearly constant. Metal concentrations varied in relation to solid-liquid contact time and aeration. Leachate pH appeared to be nearly independent of solid-liquid contact time for basic tailings. Reactive tailings having both a submerged and a surface component demonstrated increased metal mobility.

Details

ISSN :
16161068 and 10259112
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mine Water and the Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d00e179ccbdaa84306c8f936c0b065ac