Aging of Reduced Arsenic Minerals in Uranium Mill Tailings at the McClean Lake Operation

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
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Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
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1
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Publication Date:
Aug 1, 2010

Abstract

The primary arsenic minerals in the uranium ore processed at the McClean Lake Operation are rammelsbergite, niccolite and gersdorffite. During processing, a large fraction (80 - 95%) of these reduced minerals is oxidized and dissolves primarily as As5+ in the leachate solution. In the tailings preparation circuit the dissolved As5+ is precipitated as a poorly crystalline form of the mineral scorodite. Following subaqueous deposition in the tailings management facility, a temporal rise and fall in arsenic pore water concentrations has been observed. This is due to the oxidation of the residual quantities of reduced arsenic minerals initially present in the tailings sediment. The XANES (x-ray absorption near edge spectrometry) technique has shown that the As1- is gradually oxidized to As3+ and then finally As5+ in the tailings sediment. This oxidation process results in a temporary accumulation of As3+ in solution and is the source of the rise and fall in arsenic concentration observed.
Citation

APA:  (2010)  Aging of Reduced Arsenic Minerals in Uranium Mill Tailings at the McClean Lake Operation

MLA: Aging of Reduced Arsenic Minerals in Uranium Mill Tailings at the McClean Lake Operation. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2010.

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