Biological Water Treatment For Dissolved Metals And Other Inorganics

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 103 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
An ex-situ biological treatment system was implemented at a gold mine site in South Dakota. The system removes selenium and nitrate from a mixture of groundwater and surface water runoff at ambient water temperatures. The Applied Biosciences? system replaced a denitrification system that did not perform consistently, did not treat for selenium and required heating of the influent water. Installation was completed in phases starting with the selenium circuit being brought into operation in February, 2002 and the nitrate circuit in March, 2002. System design can accommodate average flows of 380 L/min (100 gallons/minute) and a maximum flow of 1,136 L/min (300 gallons/min). Four cells were designed to remove nitrate from approximately 30 mg/L to below 10 mg/L and two cells were designed to remove selenium from 0.01 mg/L and higher, to below 0.005 mg/L. No pretreatment is required to operate the system at ambient temperatures, which can fall as low as -12C in the winter, and treat water at temperatures ranging between 8C to 16C. Nutrient requirements are met using a sugar based nutrient mixture that includes a balanced C:N:P:S ratio, trace elements and vitamins. Since start up, the system has consistently been in compliance for nitrate and selenium, treating water to below detection limits for both contaminants. This paper discusses laboratory biotreatability testing of a system designed to remove selenium, arsenic, and nitrate and full-scale implementation and optimization of a system to remove nitrate and selenium.
Citation
APA:
(2003) Biological Water Treatment For Dissolved Metals And Other InorganicsMLA: Biological Water Treatment For Dissolved Metals And Other Inorganics. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2003.