Study of natural attenuation after acid in situ leaching of uranium mines using isotope fractionation and geochemical data.

Sci Total Environ

China Institute of Atomic Energy, Beiing 102413, PR China; R&D Center of Radioactive Waste Treatment, Disposal and Modeling, University of South China, Hengyang 421001, PR China; Department of Chemical Engineering, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Published: March 2023

Acid in situ leaching (AISL) is a subsurface mining approach suitable for low-grade ores which does not generate tailings, and has been adopted widely in uranium mining. However, this technique causes an extremely high concentration of contaminants at post-mining sites and in the surroundings soon after the mining ceases. As a potential AISL remediation strategy, natural attenuation has not been studied in detail. To address this problem, groundwater collected from 26 wells located within, adjacent, upgradient, and downgradient of a post-mining site were chosen to analyze the fate of U(VI), SO, δS, and δU, to reveal the main mechanisms governing the migration and attenuation of the dominant contaminants and the spatio-temporal evolutions of contaminants in the confined aquifer of the post-mining site. The δU values vary from -0.07 ‰ to 0.09 ‰ in the post-mining site and from -1.43 ‰ to 0.03 ‰ around the post-mining site. The δS values were found to vary from 3.3 ‰ to 6.2 ‰ in the post-mining site and from 6.0 ‰ to 11.0 ‰ around the post-mining site. Detailed analysis suggests that there are large differences between the range of isotopic composition variation and the range of pollutants concentration distribution, and the estimated Rayleigh isotope fractionation factor is 0.9994-0.9997 for uranium and 1.0032-1.0061 for sulfur. The isotope ratio of uranium and sulfur can be used to deduce the migration history of the contaminants and the irreversibility of the natural attenuation process in the anoxic confined aquifer. Combining the isotopic fractionation data for U and S with the concentrations of uranium and sulfate improved the accuracy of understanding of reducing conditions along the flow path. The study also indicated that as long as the geological conditions are favorable for redox reactions, natural attenuation could be used as a cost-effective remediation scheme.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.161033DOI Listing

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