Pyrite Behaviour in A Tailings Pond: C. Garcı A, A. Ballester, F. Gonza Lez, M.L. Bla Zquez
Pyrite Behaviour in A Tailings Pond: C. Garcı A, A. Ballester, F. Gonza Lez, M.L. Bla Zquez
Pyrite Behaviour in A Tailings Pond: C. Garcı A, A. Ballester, F. Gonza Lez, M.L. Bla Zquez
www.elsevier.com/locate/hydromet
Departamento de Tecnologa Industrial, Escuela Poltecnica Superior, Universidad Alfonso X el Sabio, Avda. de la Universidad,
1. 28691 Villanueva de la Canada, Spain
b
Departamento de Ciencia de los Materiales e Ingeniera Metalurgica, Facultad de Ciencias Qumicas,
Universidad Complutense, 28040 Madrid, Spain
Received 20 November 2003; received in revised form 24 February 2004; accepted 22 July 2004
Abstract
This paper deals with the behaviour in a tailings pond of the residues produced during the flotation of a complex sulphide
ore. The composition of the tailing was essentially pyrite (63.4%) with minor amounts of Cu, Pb and Zn sulphides (1.4, 0.5 and
0.8, respectively). In addition, sulphite ion and other thiosalts were present in the liquid phase. These reducing products were
added at the flotation plant in order to prevent undesirable oxidations. The presence of these reducing products controlled the
redox potential of the system, inhibiting oxidation reactions. A laboratory column was used to simulate the evolution of the
tailings in the pond. Distilled water was added at the top of the column; the water flowed across the tailings and finally was
collected at the bottom for its chemical and microbiological analysis. The actual situation in the industrial site was reproduced
by a model consisting of tow columns: one (column S) was the part of the ore under water, and the other (column HS) was the
part of the ore subject to humidity and dryness cycles. These two tests reproduced the system very well: the submerged pyrite
did not produce acidic water but the ore exposed to humidity and dryness cycles generated drainages with pH near to 2. The
metal and sulphate concentrations were consistent with this.
The influence of two other factors was also studied: bacterial activity and the height of solid residue inside the columns. The
tests showed that the presence of active bacteria intensified the weathering of the residue and that, when the height of the ore in
the column decreased, solid weathering also intensified.
Finally, a third factor taken into account was the presence of products with reducing activity associated with the ore as a
consequence of the flotation process. This combined action affected the behaviour of the residue, which was also reproduced
successfully with the assayed laboratory columns.
D 2004 Published by Elsevier B.V.
Keywords: Tailing pond; Weathering; Microbiological oxidation; Laboratory column; Acid rock drainage; Acid mine drainage
1. Introduction
* Corresponding author.
0304-386X/$ - see front matter D 2004 Published by Elsevier B.V.
doi:10.1016/j.hydromet.2004.07.010
26
2
S2 O2
3 2O2 H2 OY2H 2SO4
27
28
2.4.1. Aerobic
Chemolithotrophs: 9K medium (Silverman and
Lundgren, 1959) containing one of the following
compounds as energy source: ferrous iron (33.3 g/L),
tetrathionate (5 g/L), thiosulphate (5 g/L) or elemental
sulphur (a spatula tip).
Heterotrophs (bacteria, yeasts and fungi): (1)
medium A at pH 3 with 10 g/L glucose, 5 g/L yeast
extract and 15 g/L agar; (2) medium Y (9K medium at
pH 3 with 0.5 g/L bactotrypona, 1 g/L malt extract, 10
g/L glucose and 15 g/L agar).
2.4.2. Anaerobic
Postgates C medium was used (ASTM D 441284). The same medium but with sodium molybdate
29
AMD initial
AMD final
910
(20)(+10)
500650
88120
0.10.2
0.42
0.12
0.10.2
400450
1520
2.53.5
220350
18002000
23
0.40.8
5055
3050
56
400450
5055
30
Table 2
Chemical gradient in the tailing pond
pH
Eh (mV)
SO2
4 (mg/L)
Cu2+ (mg/L)
Zn2+ (mg/L)
Fetotal (mg/L)
Table 4
Chemical composition of the mud (% w/w)
Superficial
waters
Samples of mud
from the pond bottom
Cu
Pb
Zn
Fe
Mn
Ca
Mg
0.45
1.70
0.10
39.0
0.12
0.01
0.23
39.30
2.53.5
220350
18002000
0.40.8
3050
5055
67
(45)(3)
400500
0.30.6
0.10.3
3.35
The rest until 1008 corresponds to silica and other minor elements.
Chemolithotrophs
aerobic bacteria
Anaerobic
bacteria
Total
heterotrophs
Superficial
waters
Deep mud
1.11027.0103
1.0103
2.51019.5102
1.71022103
6.0101
% (w/w)
Chalcopyrite
Galena
Sphalerite
Pyrite
Silicates
1.44
0.46
0.77
63.37
33.95
31
Table 8
Chemical composition of water in pulps P1 and P2
Pulp
Cu
(%)
Pb
(%)
Zn
(%)
Fe
(%)
S
(%)
Ag
(g/t)
Sb
(g/t)
Pulp
Eh
(mV)
pH
Fe
(mg/L)
Cu
(mg/L)
Zn
(mg/L)
SO2
4
(mg/L)
SO2
3
(mg/L)
P1
P2
0.5
0.2
2
1.3
2
1.4
38
36
37
38
45
25
970
448
P1
P2
892
52
6.9
9.2
0.2
0.4
0.2
0.1
4.0
0.8
2940
1800
246
180
The concentrations of metals and sulphate measured in the waters produced in column S were
consistently lower than in the water of the tailing
pond, indicating that in the pond some additional
factor increased the residue weathering. This behaviour in the pond must be related to the chemical and/
or microbiological transformation of the residue
exposed to the atmosphere since the oxidation of
the submerged pyrite is negligible in spite of the
large volume of pyrite under water.
In addition, the concentrations of iron, copper and
zinc from column HS oscillated, respectively,
between 3000 and 5000, 200 and 400, and 1000 and
7000 ppm. Tall these concentrations, then, were
higher than in column S. Nevertheless, the metal
and sulphate levels in the tailing pond were consistently lower than in column HS, indicating that there
was some other factor in the pond that masked the
chemical and microbiological oxidation of the residue.
This additional factor was the presence of sulphite ion
and other thiosalts with reducing capacity, which
came from the flotation plant and inhibited the
oxidation reactions (Cotton and Wilkinson, 1995;
Greenwood and Earnshaw, 1998). The Eh values
measured in column S drainage were consistently
lower than 0 mV, whereas the Eh values in column H
S were consistently higher than more or less +300 mV.
The percentage of Fe2+ versus Fe3+ was about 60% in
column S and about 0.5% in column HS, confirming
that the conditions were reducing when the residue
was submerged and oxidising when the solid was
exposed to the air.
In conclusion, column S reproduced the part of the
system (tailing pond) corresponding to the submerged
pyrite, while column HS reproduced the part of the
Table 9
Initial number of microorganisms in pulps P1 and P2 (MPN g1)
Table 7
Granulometric distribution of the samples P1 and P2
Sample
D-80
D-50
D-10
P1
P2
29.62
36.65
12.75
19.73
1.39
4.36
Pulp
Fe-oxidising
S-oxidising
Heterotrophs
SRB
P1
P2
50
183.25102
20103
806.310
73410
32
33
Fig. 10. Metals concentrations from columns h33 and h66 drainage.
34
4. Conclusions
Pyritic wastes became largely separated in the
pond, determining the global behaviour of the system.
This distribution, with solids at the bottom of the pond
and water on top, was accompanied by a chemical and
a biological gradient. The water at the surface was
acidic, but at the bottom of the pond the pH was near
alkalinity. As a result, acidophilic aerobic sulphur
oxidising bacteria were isolated from water samples
and anaerobic sulphate reducing bacteria were isolated
from the sludge. Also, the sulphite concentration in
the pond decreased during storage of the pulp.
The laboratory column reproduced the behaviour
of the pyritic tailings in the pond. Column S
reproduced the part of the system (tailing pond)
corresponding to the submerged pyrite, while column
HS reproduced the part of the pond exposed to
oxidising conditions. Weathering of the submerged
pyritic residue did not produce acid drainage (column
S). In contrast, the waste subjected to humidity
dryness cycles (HS column) produced acid waters.
This indicates that the submerged pyrite was not
oxidised and was not a source of acid drainage. The
Eh values measured at the bottom of the pond were
consistently negative and the pH values were close to
7, while the potential measured in the surface waters
was consistently positive and the pH close to 3. This
laboratory column can therefore reproduce the chemical conditions in the tailing pond.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank the Spanish Government
Comision Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnologa
(CICYT) and ALMAGRERA S.A. for funding this
work.
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