Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 1 de 1
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
J Contam Hydrol ; 235: 103711, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32949982

ABSTRACT

This article presents the results of groundwater monitoring over a period of six years and the interpretation of these results by a reactive transport model, following an In Situ Recovery (ISR) test on the Dulaan Uul uranium deposit in Mongolia. An environmental monitoring survey was set up using 17 piezometers, from which it has been possible to describe the changes in the water composition before, during and after the ISR test. The water quality before the start of mining activities rendered it unfit for human consumption. During and after the test, a descent of the saline plume was observed, resulting in a dilution of the injection solutions. After a rapid decrease to pH = 1.13 during the production phase of the ISR test, the pH stabilized at around 4 in the production area and 5.5 below the production cell one year after the end of the test. Uranium and radium were being naturally attenuated. Uranium returned to background concentrations (0.3 mg/L) after two years and the measured 226Ra concentrations represent no more than 10% of the expected concentrations during production (75 Bq/L). The modeling of the contaminants of concern mobility, namely pH and concentrations of sulfate, uranium and 226Ra, is based on several key complementary mechanisms: density flow, cation exchange with clay minerals and co-precipitation of 226Ra in the barite. The modeling results show that the observed plume descent and sulfate dilution can only be predicted if consideration of a high-density flow is included. Similarly, the changes in pH and 226Ra concentration are only correctly predicted when the cationic exchanges with the clays and the co-precipitation reaction within the barite using the solid solution theory are integrated into the models. Finally, the proper representation of the changes in water composition at the scale of the test requires the use of a sufficiently fine mesh (1 m × 1 m cell) to take into account the spatial variability of hydrogeological (permeability distribution in particular) and geological (reduced, oxidized and mineralized facies distributions) parameters.


Subject(s)
Groundwater , Radium , Uranium , Water Pollutants, Radioactive , Humans , Mining , Mongolia , Radium/analysis , Uranium/analysis
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...