Electrokinetic Dewatering of Uranium Mine Tailings

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Julie Q. Shang
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
1
File Size:
8 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 1, 2010

Abstract

The electrokinetic (EK) technology for dewatering of two tailings from the uranium mines in Northern Saskatchewan is studied in bench scale experiments. The study includes four phases: 1. Characterization of two uranium mine tailings; 2. Assessment of voltage loss on the coated Ti anode and water interface. 3. EK cell test series to measure electrokinetic permeability (ke) of two tailings; 4. EK dewatering test series to study electrokinetic enhanced gravity dewatering on two tailings samples. The results have demonstrated that both tailings responded positively to the EK process. For the tailings containing gypsum, the EK dewatering should be a short term process (within one hour) with anode conditioning (pH adjustment). The tailings containing clay minerals responded well to EK dewatering, in which pH adjustment is optional and will further enhance the EK flow. Both tailings as tested have low hydraulic conductivity and are particularly suitable for EK dewatering and consolidation.
Citation

APA: Julie Q. Shang  (2010)  Electrokinetic Dewatering of Uranium Mine Tailings

MLA: Julie Q. Shang Electrokinetic Dewatering of Uranium Mine Tailings. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2010.

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