Iron oxyhydroxide coating of pyrite for acid mine drainage control |
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Authors: | Danielle M.C. Huminicki J. Donald Rimstidt |
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Affiliation: | aVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Department of Geosciences, 4044 Derring Hall, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA |
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Abstract: | When pyrite oxidizes at near neutral pH in the presence of sufficient alkalinity, Fe oxyhydroxide coatings develop on the surface. As these coatings grow thicker and denser they block oxidant transport from the solution to the pyrite surface and reduce the rate of pyrite oxidation. The authors’ measurements of pyrite oxidation rates in a NaHCO3 solution show that the coating grows in two stages. In the first stage Fe oxyhydroxide colloids form and then attach to the pyrite surface to produce a slight reduction in oxidant transport. In the second stage interstitial precipitation of Fe oxyhydroxide material between the colloidal particles reduces the oxidant’s diffusion coefficient by more than five orders of magnitude. This causes the pyrite oxidation rate to decline as the square root of time. The kinetic predominance diagram, which compares the rates of Fe transformation reactions, shows that when pyrite oxidation releases Fe quickly enough for the total Fe concentration to rise to about 10−8 m, ferrihydrite forms but lower rates of Fe release will not produce coatings. Extrapolation of the results to longer times predicts that pyrite-bearing materials need to be treated with an extra source of alkalinity for several decades to produce coatings that are thick enough to be sustained by alkalinity levels typical of groundwater. However, once the coatings develop no additional treatment is needed and further pyrite oxidation simply causes the coating to grow thicker and denser until the entire pyrite grain is pseudomorphically replaced by goethite. |
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