Litcius/Paper detail

Effectiveness of Fly Ash and Red Mud as Strategies for Sustainable Acid Mine Drainage Management

Viktoria Keller, Sreċko Stopić, Buhle Xakalashe, Yiqian Ma, Sehliselo Ndlovu, Brian Mwewa, Geoffrey S. Simate, Bernd Friedrich

2020Minerals29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Acid mine drainage (AMD), red mud (RM) and coal fly ash (CFA) are potential high environmental pollution problems due to their acidity, toxic metals and sulphate contents. Treatment of acidic mine water requires the generation of enough alkalinity to neutralize the excess acidity. Therefore, red mud types from Germany and Greece were chosen for the neutralization of AMD from South Africa, where this problem is notorious. Because of the high alkalinity, German red mud is the most promising precipitation agent achieving the highest pH-values. CFA is less efficient for a neutralization and precipitation process. An increase in temperature increases the adsorption kinetics. The maximum pH-value of 6.0 can be reached by the addition of 100 g German red mud at 20 °C to AMD-water with an initial pH value of 1.9. German red mud removes 99% of the aluminium as aluminium hydroxide at pH 5.0. The rare earth elements (yttrium and cerium) are adsorbed by Greek red mud with an efficiency of 50% and 80% at 60 °C in 5 min, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

Red mudAlkalinityAcid mine drainageFly ashBayer processHydroxideAluminium hydroxideEnvironmental chemistryPrecipitationChemistryAcid rainEnvironmental scienceDrainageAdsorptionBauxiteAluminiumInorganic chemistryEcologyPhysicsPhysical chemistryMeteorologyOrganic chemistryBiologyMine drainage and remediation techniquesBauxite Residue and UtilizationCoal and Its By-products