Author/Authors :
Pyeong-Koo Lee، نويسنده , , Min-Ju Kang، نويسنده , , Sang-Hoon Choi، نويسنده , , Jean-Claude Touray، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Mineralogical examinations were performed to characterize the formation of secondary minerals and natural removal process of dissolved As and trace metals (Pb, Zn and Cu) from sulfide oxidation. Laboratory-based leaching tests were also conducted to determine whether the concentrations of As and trace metals in the leachates from waste-rock materials and contaminated soil could be affected by the presence acids such as acid rainwater or acid mine drainage. Waste-rock materials and contaminated soil were compared by 4-day leaching tests using HNO3 solutions of increasing acidity (0.00001–0.1 mole/L). Mineralogical studies of the waste rocks confirmed the presence of Fe-(oxy)hydroxides (e.g. goethite), jarosite, elemental S, Fe-sulfates, amorphous Fe–As phases, anglesite and covellite as secondary minerals. These secondary minerals act as mineralogical scavengers of dissolved trace metals, image and acidity released by sulfide oxidation. Arsenic was attenuated by the adsorption on Fe-(oxy)hydroxides and/or the formation of an amorphous Fe–As phase, with a Fe/As ratio = 1 (maybe scorodite: FeAsO4 · 2H2O). Electron probe microanalyses data showed that the Fe-(oxy)hydroxides had high concentrations of Pb (up to 21 wt%), with appreciable amounts of As (up to 7.7 wt%), Zn (up to 4.6 wt%) and Cu (up to 2.5 wt%) indicating that dissolved metals were co-precipitated and adsorbed onto Fe-(oxy)hydroxides, Fe(Mn)-hydroxides and Fe-sulfates.