The role of scale in prediction of mine drainage chemistry

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
M Edraki N McIntyre K R. Jain
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
4
File Size:
160 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 2, 2023

Abstract

From the very early stages of a mining project, there is a requirement to predict the chemistry of potential drainages from various waste storage facilities. However, using relative masses to scale chemical loads measured by laboratory kinetic tests, such as humidity cells, to a full-scale mine waste facility will lead to concentration predictions that are unrealistically high for many dissolved constituents. Scaling factors developed by various procedures indicate that laboratory rates may range anywhere from two to eight times (Drever and Clow, 1995) to 100 to 1000 times faster than field rates (Malmstrom et al, 2000; Smith and Beckie, 2003; Ritchie, 1994). This contribution will use previous works and secondary data to discuss the significance of scale in water quality predictions. It will also present primary experimental geochemical and numerical data from a column leaching study on coal spoils to discuss potential applications of mesoscale leaching tests in bridging the gap between bench-top tests and field scale trials.
Citation

APA: M Edraki N McIntyre K R. Jain  (2023)  The role of scale in prediction of mine drainage chemistry

MLA: M Edraki N McIntyre K R. Jain The role of scale in prediction of mine drainage chemistry. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2023.

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