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  • 1995-1999  (2)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-2932
    Keywords: diffusion coefficient ; gaseous oxygen ; mine tailings ; oxidation ; water content
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Notes: Abstract To evaluate the effectiveness of soil covers, column experiments were conducted on tailings protected by a three-layer soil cover and tailings directly exposed in the open laboratory for a period of 760 days. Periodic rain application was performed to simulate field conditions, and at four times during the experiments the pore water was completely flushed out of each column for analysis. Profiles of oxygen, temperature, and volumetric water content were measured throughout the experiment, and the post-testing pore water quality was also characterized. A one-dimensional semi-analytic diffusion model was used to simulate oxygen profiles in the uncovered tailings. Modelling performed using the geochemical code MINTEQ showed that in the laboratory, aluminium concentrations in the tailings pore water were controlled by Al(OH)SO4, sulphate by gypsum and Al(OH)SO4and iron by lepidocrocite in the upper half and by ferrihydrite in the lower half. In the field, however, the iron oxyhydroxide minerals formed in the oxidized zone appear to be dissolving. It was found that the cover was effective in preventing significant desaturation of the clay, even over a 150-day drying period. The covered tailings did not oxidize much during the experiments. In the uncovered tailings, oxygen modelling and examination of the geochemistry show that the rate of gross oxidation and the advancement of the oxidation front decreases with time. However, pore water quality is controlled by geochemical processes other than oxidation, as reported in the field.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1999-11-23
    Description: An experimental soil cover constructed near London, Ontario, 23.2 m × 15.2 m in plan area, has been monitored for 2 years for percolation and water-content data. The cover was a multilayer system consisting of a compacted till barrier soil placed between evaporation and drainage barriers of sandy gravel. Half of the cover was capped with coarse stone to prevent erosion and the other half was covered with topsoil to facilitate revegetation. High percolation rates and substantial desiccation of the barrier soil were reported under the topsoil protection layer. Unsaturated-saturated liquid and vapour flow modelling shows that the topsoil may act as a capillary barrier to infiltration, thereby promoting desiccation of the underlying compacted till. Percolation through the cover was measured using lysimeters filled with 5-16 cm (2-6 in.) diameter stone placed directly underneath the compacted till. Though the field lysimeters report water and laboratory tests show no evidence of flow partitioning between coarse stone and gravel, two-dimensional unsaturated-saturated liquid flow modelling of the lysimeter-cover interaction predicts that the lysimeters should not report significant water. Phenomena not simulated by the modelling, which include macrostructure flow in the barrier soil, trickle flow in the coarse stone, and vapour diffusion, are investigated and discussed. Consideration of vapour flow yields results that are inconsistent with the predictions of the liquid flow modelling. Key words: capillary barrier, lysimeters, soil covers, unsaturated flow, vapour flow.
    Print ISSN: 0008-3674
    Electronic ISSN: 1208-6010
    Topics: Geosciences
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