Evaluating dual-domain models for upscaling multicomponent reactive transport in mine waste rock

Author(s):  
D. Pedretti ◽  
B. Vriens ◽  
E.K. Skierszkan ◽  
P. Baják ◽  
K.U. Mayer ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bas Vriens ◽  
Nicolas Seigneur ◽  
Celedonio Aranda ◽  
Uli Mayer ◽  
Roger Beckie

<p>The mining industry globally produces millions of tons of waste rock every year. The weathering of exposed metal(loid)-rich waste rock can produce poor-quality effluent, and mine sites therefore need to establish water-quality management strategies that predict and mitigate environmental impacts. Technical frameworks to support drainage quality predictions and industrial waste-rock management typically combine classic static and kinetic testing procedures, field-scale experiments and sometimes geochemical equilibrium- and reactive-transport models. However, predictions of waste rock weathering and drainage processes remain challenging on relevant spatiotemporal scales, due to site-specificity in waste rock and local weathering conditions, unresolved heterogeneity in large waste-rock systems and the intricate (non-linear) coupling between chemical kinetics and mass- and heat transfer processes.</p><p>We synthesized long-term (>10 yr) hydrogeochemical field data from a multiscale experimental research program at the Antamina mine, Peru. At Antamina, various waste-rock materials have been extensively hydraulically, physically and geochemically characterized and weathered at different spatiotemporal scales. This data set provides a unique opportunity to quantitatively assess the mechanisms that affect drainage from different waste-rock types under field conditions. Monitoring of weathering rates in humidity cell tests (~1 kg), column experiments (~170 kg), field barrel kinetic tests (~350 kg), and mesoscale experimental piles (~6,500,000 kg) revealed that normalized mass loadings from different waste-rock types systematically decreased with increasing experimental scale.</p><p>We developed a process-based reactive-transport framework to reproduce the recorded waste-rock drainage trends from the various field experiments. For each of the experiments, 1-D reactive-transport models were constructed in MIN3P-HPC, all including the same formulations for, e.g., transient unsaturated flow, advective-diffusive transport of aqueous species, gas diffusion, gas-liquid partitioning and equilibrium or kinetic mineral dissolution and precipitation reactions. The models were exclusively parameterized with measured field hydrostatics (e.g., tracer testing, volumetric water contents; van Genuchten parameters), analyzed physicochemical bulk waste-rock properties (e.g., bulk geochemistry, mineral content, particle size), or adopted literature values (e.g., kinetic rate laws and constants).</p><p>At all experimental scales, the recorded drainage quality evolution could be successfully reproduced with the consistent suite of field-parameterized physical transport processes and kinetic rate laws. A comparison of fitted effective rate coefficients reveals that reduced weathering rates at increasing scales mostly originate from decreasing specific mineral surface areas (particle sizes increase with experimental scale) and possibly by surface passivation, although the effects of flow bypassing and channeling are not yet fully investigated. This work demonstrates that with efforts focused on the identification and parameterization of the relevant physicochemical processes, effective yet process-based models can be developed from readily available bulk waste-rock parameters to predict and upscale mine waste rock weathering and drainage quality trends across laboratory-to-practice-relevant scale ranges.</p>


Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 728
Author(s):  
Bas Vriens ◽  
Benoît Plante ◽  
Nicolas Seigneur ◽  
Heather Jamieson

Mismanagement of mine waste rock can mobilize acidity, metal (loid)s, and other contaminants, and thereby negatively affect downstream environments. Hence, strategic long-term planning is required to prevent and mitigate deleterious environmental impacts. Technical frameworks to support waste-rock management have existed for decades and typically combine static and kinetic testing, field-scale experiments, and sometimes reactive-transport models. Yet, the design and implementation of robust long-term solutions remains challenging to date, due to site-specificity in the generated waste rock and local weathering conditions, physicochemical heterogeneity in large-scale systems, and the intricate coupling between chemical kinetics and mass- and heat-transfer processes. This work reviews recent advances in our understanding of the hydrogeochemical behavior of mine waste rock, including improved laboratory testing procedures, innovative analytical techniques, multi-scale field investigations, and reactive-transport modeling. Remaining knowledge-gaps pertaining to the processes involved in mine waste weathering and their parameterization are identified. Practical and sustainable waste-rock management decisions can to a large extent be informed by evidence-based simplification of complex waste-rock systems and through targeted quantification of a limited number of physicochemical parameters. Future research on the key (bio)geochemical processes and transport dynamics in waste-rock piles is essential to further optimize management and minimize potential negative environmental impacts.


2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 64-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Hitch ◽  
Sheila M. Ballantyne ◽  
Sarah R. Hindle

2018 ◽  
Vol 150 ◽  
pp. 40-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Power ◽  
Panagiotis Tsourlos ◽  
Murugan Ramasamy ◽  
Aristeidis Nivorlis ◽  
Martin Mkandawire

Author(s):  
Maasago M. Sepadi ◽  
Martha Chadyiwa ◽  
Vusumuzi Nkosi

The South African mining industry is one of the largest producers of platinum (Pt) in the world. Workers in this industry are exposed to significant amounts of dust, and this dust consists of particles sizes that can penetrate deep inside the respiratory region. A cross-sectional study was conducted to evaluate dust exposure risk at two Pt mine waste rock crusher plants (Facility A and B) in Limpopo, South Africa. Workers’ demographic and occupational information was collected through a structured questionnaire, a walk-through observation on facilities’ processes, and static dust sampling for the collection of inhalable and respirable dust particles using the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOH) 7602 and the Methods for Determination of Hazardous Substance (MDHS) 14/4 as guidelines. Only 79% of Pt mine workers, used their respiratory protective equipment (RPE), sixty-five percent were exposed to work shifts exceeding the recommended eight hours and 8.8% had been employed for more than ten years. The mean time-weighted average (TWA) dust concentrations between Facility A and B showed a significant difference (p < 0.026). The Pt mine’s inhalable concentrations (range 0.03–2.2 mg/m3) were higher than the respirable concentrations (range 0.02–0.7 mg/m3), however were all below the respective international and local occupational exposure limits (OELs). The Pt mine’s respirable crystalline silica (SiO2) quartz levels were all found below the detectable limit (<0.01 mg/m3). The Pt miners had increased health risks due to accumulated low levels of dust exposure and lack of usage of RPE. It is recommended that an improved dust control program be put in place which includes, but is not limited to, stockpile enclosures, tire stops with water sprays, and education on the importance of RPE usage.


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