A novel bioelectrochemical system for chemical-free permanent treatment of acid mine drainage.

Water Res

Advanced Water Management Centre, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: December 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The mining sector faces increasing challenges due to strict environmental laws, making efficient treatment of acid mine drainage (AMD) crucial for sustainability and profitability.
  • A new bioelectrochemical system (BES) has shown effectiveness in treating AMD without the need for chemical additives, achieving substantial sulfate removal and reduced salinity.
  • Additionally, the BES not only recovers valuable metals like aluminum and zinc but also precipitates rare earth elements, which can help offset treatment costs and enhance economic viability.

Article Abstract

The mining sector is currently under unprecedented pressure due to stringent environmental regulations. As a consequence, a permanent acid mine drainage (AMD) treatment is increasingly being regarded as a desirable target with direct benefits for the environment and the operational and economic viability of the resources sector. In this study we demonstrate that a novel bioelectrochemical system (BES) can deliver permanent treatment of acid mine drainage without chemical dosing. The technology consists of a two-cell bioelectrochemical setup to enable the removal of sulfate from the ongoing reduction-oxidation sulfur cycle to less than 550 mg L (85 ± 2% removal from a real AMD of an abandoned silver mine), thereby also reducing salinity at an electrical energy requirement of 10 ± 0.3 kWh kg of SO-S removed. In addition, the BES operation drove the removal and recovery of the main cations Al, Fe, Mg, Zn at rates of 151 ± 0 g Al m d, 179 ± 1 g Fe m d, 172 ± 1 g Mg m d and 46 ± 0 g Zn m d into a concentrate stream containing 263 ± 2 mg Al, 279 ± 2 mg Fe, 152 ± 0 mg Mg and 90 ± 0 mg Zn per gram of solid precipitated after BES fed-rate control treatment. The solid metal-sludge was twice less voluminous and 9 times more readily settleable than metal-sludge precipitated using NaOH. The continuous BES treatment also demonstrated the concomitant precipitation of rare earth elements together with yttrium (REY), with up to 498 ± 70 μg Y, 166 ± 27 μg Nd, 155 ± 14 μg Gd per gram of solid, among other high-value metals. The high-REY precipitates could be used to offset the treatment costs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2017.09.058DOI Listing

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