Effects of pressure on the biogeochemical and geotechnical behavior of treated oil sands tailings in a pit lake scenario.

Chemosphere

Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 1H9, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: October 2024

Reclamation options for oil sands fluid fine tailings (FFT) are limited due to its challenging geotechnical properties, which include high water and clay contents and low shear strength. A feasible reclamation option for tailings with these properties is water capped FFT deposits (pit lakes). A relatively new proposal is to deposit FFT that has been treated with alum and polyacrylamide in pit lakes. Though over 65 Mm of alum/polyacrylamide treated FFT has been deposited to date, there is limited publicly available information on the biogeochemical and geotechnical behavior of this treated FFT. Further, the effects of pressure from overlying tailings on microbial activity and biogeochemical cycling in oil sands tailings has not been previously investigated. Twelve 5.5 L columns were designed to mimic alum/polyacrylamide treated FFT deposited beneath a water cap. A 2x2 factorial design was used to apply pressure and hydrocarbon amendments to the tailings. Pressure (0.3-5.1 kPa) was applied incrementally and columns were monitored for 360 d. Pressure significantly enhanced consolidation and microbial activity in treated FFT. Columns with pressure generated significantly more CH and CO and had significant increases in dissolved organic carbon and chemical oxygen demand in the FFT and water caps. The enhanced microbial activity in columns with pressure indicates that pressure increased the solubility of microbial substrates and metabolites in the tailings, thereby increasing the bioavailability of these compounds. Ammonium generation was significantly higher in columns with pressure, suggesting that microorganisms utilized polyacrylamide and/or N fixation as a nitrogen source to meet enhanced nutrient demands. Pressure also impacted microbial community structure, shifting methanogenic communities from hydrogenotrophic methanogens to predominately acetoclastic methanogens. This study also revealed the importance of sulfur cycling in treated FFT. Extensive sulfate reduction occurred in all columns, generating dissolved sulfides and HS, and this was accelerated by hydrocarbon amendments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.143395DOI Listing

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