Radium In Mining Effluents: Promising Water Treatment And Environmental Monitoring

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
J. Schick V. Granger
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
699 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2020

Abstract

Nowadays, all French former uranium mining sites are remediated and redeveloped. If needed, mining waters containing radium have to be treated before discharged into the environment. Classical radium treatment consists in a (Ba,Ra)SO4 salt precipitation and radium monitoring was carried out using a time-consuming analysis called emanometry. Three zeolite samples have been tested to remove 226Ra from mining water. In batch experiment, radium was totally (R=100%) and quickly removed after 2 minutes contact time. Continuous sorption experiments were carried out through a vertical column at lab scale. Chabazite is the most efficient zeolite with an 226Ra activity below 0.2 Bq/L until 60000 Bed Volume. Chabazite is always efficient although radium content in material reaches 150 Bq/g. 226Ra uptake was also tested at semi-industrial scale on a pilot plant. More than 3000 m3 were successfully treated with a radium content below 0.1 Bq/L. The environmental impact assessment of Ra-chabazite was characterized by using batch leaching tests made according to the NF EN 12457-2 standard as applied on all wastes. Ra-chabazite stability is excellent during this test: radium leaching is very low, less than 0.005%. A new 226Ra measurement method was developed by ICP-MS for a better analysis reactivity. This new method was carried out in a couple of minutes with a lower sample volume than emanometry. The validation was performed according to the French NF T90-210 standard for the calibration function definition, the limit of quantification, the accuracy and the interferences.
Citation

APA: J. Schick V. Granger  (2020)  Radium In Mining Effluents: Promising Water Treatment And Environmental Monitoring

MLA: J. Schick V. Granger Radium In Mining Effluents: Promising Water Treatment And Environmental Monitoring. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2020.

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