Acid mine drainage, acid and metalliferous drainage (AMD), or acid rock drainage (ARD) is the outflow of acidic water from metal mines or coal mines.
Acid rock drainage occurs naturally within some environments as
part of the rock weathering process but is exacerbated by large-scale
earth disturbances characteristic of mining and other large construction
activities, usually within rocks containing an abundance of sulfide minerals.
Areas where the earth has been disturbed (e.g. construction sites,
subdivisions, and transportation corridors) may create acid rock
drainage. In many localities, the liquid that drains from coal
stocks, coal handling facilities, coal washeries, and coal waste tips
can be highly acidic, and in such cases it is treated as acid rock
drainage. This liquid often contains toxic metals, such as copper or
iron. These, combined with reduced pH, have a detrimental impact on the
streams aquatic environments.
The same type of chemical reactions and processes may occur through the disturbance of acid sulfate soils formed under coastal or estuarine conditions after the last major sea level rise, and constitutes a similar environmental hazard.
Nomenclature
Historically,
the acidic discharges from active or abandoned mines were called acid
mine drainage, or AMD. The term acid rock drainage, or ARD, was
introduced in the 1980s and 1990s to indicate that acidic drainage can
originate from sources other than mines.
For example, a paper presented in 1991 at a major international
conference on this subject was titled: "The Prediction of Acid Rock
Drainage - Lessons from the Database" Both AMD and ARD refer to low pH or acidic waters caused by the oxidation of sulfide minerals, though ARD is the more generic name.
In cases where drainage from a mine is not acidic and has dissolved metals or metalloids, or was originally acidic, but has been neutralized along its flow path, then it is described as "Neutral Mine Drainage", "Mining-Influenced Water" or otherwise. None of these other names have gained general acceptance.
Occurrence
Sub-surface mining often progresses below the water table,
so water must be constantly pumped out of the mine in order to prevent
flooding. When a mine is abandoned, the pumping ceases, and water floods
the mine. This introduction of water is the initial step in most acid
rock drainage situations. Tailings piles or ponds, mine waste rock dumps, and coal spoils are also an important source of acid mine drainage.
After being exposed to air and water, oxidation of metal sulfides (often pyrite, which is iron-sulfide) within the surrounding rock and overburden generates acidity. Colonies of bacteria and archaea
greatly accelerate the decomposition of metal ions, although the
reactions also occur in an abiotic environment. These microbes, called extremophiles for their ability to survive in harsh conditions, occur naturally in the rock, but limited water and oxygen supplies usually keep their numbers low. Special extremophiles known as Acidophiles especially favor the low pH levels of abandoned mines. In particular, Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans is a key contributor to pyrite oxidation.
Metal mines may generate highly acidic discharges where the ore is a sulfide mineral or is associated with pyrite. In these cases the predominant metal ion may not be iron but rather zinc, copper, or nickel. The most commonly mined ore of copper, chalcopyrite, is itself a copper-iron-sulfide and occurs with a range of other sulfides. Thus, copper mines are often major culprits of acid mine drainage.
At some mines, acidic drainage is detected within 2–5 years after
mining begins, whereas at other mines, it is not detected for several
decades.
In addition, acidic drainage may be generated for decades or centuries
after it is first detected. For this reason, acid mine drainage is
considered a serious long-term environmental problem associated with
mining.
Chemistry
The chemistry of oxidation of pyrites, the production of ferrous ions and subsequently ferric ions, is very complex, and this complexity has considerably inhibited the design of effective treatment options.
Although a host of chemical processes contribute to acid mine
drainage, pyrite oxidation is by far the greatest contributor. A general
equation for this process is:
- .
The oxidation of the sulfide to sulfate solubilizes the ferrous iron (iron(II)), which is subsequently oxidized to ferric iron (iron(III)):
- .
Either of these reactions can occur spontaneously or can be catalyzed
by microorganisms that derive energy from the oxidation reaction. The
ferric cations produced can also oxidize additional pyrite and reduce
into ferrous ions:
- .
The net effect of these reactions is to release H+, which lowers the pH and maintains the solubility of the ferric ion.
Effects
Effects on pH
Water temperatures as high as 47 °C have been measured underground at the Iron Mountain Mine, and the pH can be as low as
-3.6.
Organisms which cause acid mine drainage can thrive in waters with pH very close to zero. Negative pH occurs when water evaporates from already acidic pools thereby increasing the concentration of hydrogen ions.
About half of the coal mine discharges in Pennsylvania have pH under 5. However, a significant portion of mine drainage in both the bituminous and anthracite regions of Pennsylvania is alkaline, because limestone in the overburden neutralizes acid before the drainage emanates.
Acid rock drainage has recently been a hindrance to the completion of the construction of Interstate 99 near State College, Pennsylvania.
However, this acid rock drainage didn't come from a mine; rather, it
was produced by oxidation of pyrite-rich rock which was unearthed during
a road cut and then used as filler material in the I-99 construction. A similar situation developed at the Halifax airport in Canada. It is from these and similar experiences that the term acid rock drainage has emerged as being preferable to acid mine drainage, thereby emphasizing the general nature of the problem.
Yellow boy
When the pH of acid mine drainage is raised past 3, either through contact with fresh water or neutralizing minerals, previously soluble iron(III) ions precipitate as iron(III) hydroxide, a yellow-orange solid colloquially known as yellow boy.
Other types of iron precipitates are possible, including iron oxides
and oxyhydroxides. All these precipitates can discolor water and smother
plant and animal life on the streambed, disrupting stream ecosystems
(a specific offense under the Fisheries Act in Canada). The process
also produces additional hydrogen ions, which can further decrease pH.
In some cases, the concentrations of iron hydroxides in yellow boy are
so high, the precipitate can be recovered for commercial use in
pigments.
Trace metal and semi-metal contamination
Many
acid rock discharges also contain elevated levels of potentially toxic
metals, especially nickel and copper with lower levels of a range of
trace and semi-metal ions such as lead, arsenic, aluminium, and manganese.
The elevated levels of heavy metals can only be dissolved in waters
that have a low pH, as is found in the acidic waters produced by pyrite
oxidation. In the coal belt around the south Wales valleys in the UK highly acidic nickel-rich discharges from coal stocking sites have proved to be particularly troublesome.
Effects on aquatic wildlife
Acid
mine drainage also affects the wildlife living within the affected body
of water. Aquatic macroinvertebrates living in streams or parts of
streams affected by acid mine drainage show less individuals, less
diversity, and less biomass. Many species of fish also cannot tolerate
the pollution.
Among the macroinvertebrates, certain species can be found at only
certain levels of pollution, while other species can be found over a
wide range.
Identification and prediction
In
a mining setting it is leading practice to carry out a geochemical
assessment of mine materials during the early stages of a project to
determine the potential for AMD. The geochemical assessment aims to map
the distribution and variability of key geochemical parameters, acid
generating and element leaching characteristics.
The assessment may include:
- Sampling;
- Static geochemical testwork (e.g. acid-base accounting, sulfur speciation);
- Kinetic geochemical testwork - Conducting oxygen consumption tests, such as the OxCon, to quantify acidity generation rates
- Modelling of oxidation, pollutant generation and release; and
- Modelling of material composition.
Treatment
Oversight
In the United Kingdom, many discharges from abandoned mines are exempt from regulatory control. In such cases the Environment Agency working with partners such as the Coal Authority have provided some innovative solutions, including constructed wetland solutions such as on the River Pelenna in the valley of the River Afan near Port Talbot and the constructed wetland next to the River Neath at Ynysarwed.
Although abandoned underground mines produce most of the acid
mine drainage, some recently mined and reclaimed surface mines have
produced ARD and have degraded local ground-water and surface-water
resources. Acidic water produced at active mines must be neutralized to
achieve pH 6-9 before discharge from a mine site to a stream is
permitted.
In Canada, work to reduce the effects of acid mine drainage is
concentrated under the Mine Environment Neutral Drainage (MEND) program.
Total liability from acid rock drainage is estimated to be between $2
billion and $5 billion CAD.
Over a period of eight years, MEND claims to have reduced ARD
liability by up to $400 million CAD, from an investment of $17.5 million
CAD.
Methods
Lime neutralization
By far, the most commonly used commercial process for treating acid mine drainage is lime (CaO)
precipitation in a high-density sludge (HDS) process. In this
application, a slurry of lime is dispersed into a tank containing acid
mine drainage and recycled sludge to increase water pH to about 9. At
this pH, most toxic metals become insoluble and precipitate, aided by
the presence of recycled sludge. Optionally, air may be introduced in
this tank to oxidize iron and manganese and assist in their
precipitation. The resulting slurry is directed to a sludge-settling
vessel, such as a clarifier.
In that vessel, clean water will overflow for release, whereas settled
metal precipitates (sludge) will be recycled to the acid mine drainage
treatment tank, with a sludge-wasting side stream. A number of
variations of this process exist, as dictated by the chemistry of ARD,
its volume, and other factors. Generally, the products of the HDS process also contain gypsum (CaSO4)
and unreacted lime, which enhance both its settleability and resistance
to re-acidification and metal mobilization. A general equation for this
process is:
or more precisely in aqueous solution:
- SO42− + 2H+ + Ca2++O2−(aq) -> Ca2+ + SO42−(aq) + 2H+ + O2− (aq)
Less complex variants of this process, such as simple lime
neutralization, may involve no more than a lime silo, mixing tank and
settling pond. These systems are far less costly to build, but are also
less efficient (i.e., longer reaction times are required, and they
produce a discharge with higher trace metal concentrations, if present).
They would be suitable for relatively small flows or less complex acid
mine drainage.
Calcium silicate neutralization
A
calcium silicate feedstock, made from processed steel slag, can also be
used to neutralize active acidity in AMD systems by removing free
hydrogen ions from the bulk solution, thereby increasing pH. As the
silicate anion captures H+ ions (raising the pH), it forms monosilicic acid (H4SiO4),
a neutral solute. Monosilicic acid remains in the bulk solution to play
many roles in correcting the adverse effects of acidic conditions. In
the bulk solution, the silicate anion is very active in neutralizing H+ cations in the soil solution.
While its mode-of-action is quite different from limestone, the ability
of calcium silicate to neutralize acid solutions is equivalent to
limestone as evidenced by its CCE value of 90-100% and its relative
neutralizing value of 98%.
In the presence of heavy metals, calcium silicate reacts in a
different manner than limestone. As limestone raises the pH of the bulk
solution, and if heavy metals are present, precipitation of the metal
hydroxides (with extremely low solubilities) is normally accelerated and
the potential of armoring of limestone particles increases
significantly. In the calcium silicate aggregate,
as silicic acid species are absorbed onto the metal surface, the
development of silica layers (mono- and bi-layers) lead to the formation
of colloidal complexes with neutral or negative surface charges. These
negatively charged colloids create an electrostatic repulsion with each
other (as well as with the negatively charged calcium silicate granules)
and the sequestered metal colloids are stabilized and remain in a
dispersed state - effectively interrupting metal precipitation and
reducing vulnerability of the material to armoring.
Carbonate neutralization
Generally, limestone or other calcareous strata
that could neutralize acid are lacking or deficient at sites that
produce acidic rock drainage. Limestone chips may be introduced into
sites to create a neutralizing effect. Where limestone has been used,
such as at Cwm Rheidol in mid Wales, the positive impact has been much less than anticipated because of the creation of an insoluble calcium sulfate layer on the limestone chips, binding the material and preventing further neutralization.
Ion exchange
Cation exchange
processes have previously been investigated as a potential treatment
for acid mine drainage. The principle is that an ion exchange resin can
remove potentially toxic metals (cationic resins), or chlorides,
sulfates and uranyl sulfate complexes (anionic resins) from mine water.
Once the contaminants are adsorbed, the exchange sites on resins must
be regenerated, which typically requires acidic and basic reagents and
generates a brine that contains the pollutants in a concentrated form. A
South African company that won the 2013 IChemE (ww.icheme.org) award
for water management and supply (treating AMD) have developed a patented
ion-exchange process that treats mine effluents (and AMD) economically.
Constructed wetlands
Constructed wetlands
systems have been proposed during the 1980s to treat acid mine drainage
generated by the abandoned coal mines in Eastern Appalachia.
Generally, the wetlands receive near-neutral water, after it has been
neutralized by (typically) a limestone-based treatment process.
Metal precipitation occurs from their oxidation at near-neutral pH,
complexation with organic matter, precipitation as carbonates or
sulfides. The latter results from sediment-borne anaerobic bacteria
capable of reverting sulfate ions into sulfide ions. These sulfide ions
can then bind with heavy metal ions, precipitating heavy metals out of
solution and effectively reversing the entire process.
The attractiveness of a constructed wetlands solution lies in its
relative low cost. They are limited by the metal loads they can deal
with (either from high flows or metal concentrations), though current
practitioners have succeeded in developing constructed wetlands that
treat high volumes
and/or highly acidic water (with adequate pre-treatment). Typically,
the effluent from constructed wetland receiving near-neutral water will
be well-buffered at between 6.5-7.0 and can readily be discharged. Some
of metal precipitates retained in sediments are unstable when exposed to
oxygen (e.g., copper sulfide or elemental selenium), and it is very
important that the wetland sediments remain largely or permanently
submerged.
An example of an effective constructed wetland is on the Afon Pelena in the River Afan valley above Port Talbot where highly ferruginous discharges from the Whitworth mine have been successfully treated.
Precipitation of metal sulfides
Most base metals in acidic solution precipitate in contact with free sulfide, e.g. from H2S
or NaHS. Solid-liquid separation after reaction would produce a base
metal-free effluent that can be discharged or further treated to reduce
sulfate, and a metal sulfide concentrate with possible economic value.
As an alternative, several researchers have investigated the precipitation of metals using biogenic sulfide. In this process, Sulfate-reducing bacteria oxidize organic matter using sulfate, instead of oxygen. Their metabolic products include bicarbonate, which can neutralize water acidity, and hydrogen sulfide,
which forms highly insoluble precipitates with many toxic metals.
Although promising, this process has been slow in being adopted for a
variety of technical reasons.
Technologies
Many technologies exist for the treatment of AMD from traditional high cost water treatment plants to simple in situ water treatment reagent dosing methods.
Metagenomic study of acid mine drainage
With the advance of large-scale sequencing strategies, genomes
of microorganisms in the acid mine drainage community are directly
sequenced from the environment. The nearly full genomic constructs
allows new understanding of the community and able to reconstruct their
metabolic pathways. Our knowledge of acidophiles in acid mine drainage remains rudimentary: we know of many more species associated with ARD than we can establish roles and functions.
Microbes and drug discovery
Scientists
have recently begun to explore acid mine drainage and mine reclamation
sites for unique soil bacteria capable of producing new pharmaceutical
leads. Soil microbes have long been a source for effective drugs and new research, such as that conducted at the Center for Pharmaceutical Research and Innovation, suggests these extreme environments to be an untapped source for new discovery.
List of selected acid mine drainage sites worldwide
This
list includes both mines producing acid mine drainage and river systems
significantly affected by such drainage. It is by no means complete, as
worldwide, several thousands of such sites exist.
Africa
Europe
- Avoca, County Wicklow, Ireland
- Aznalcollar mine on the Guadiamar, Spain
- Wheal Jane, Cornwall, England
- Tinto River, Spain
- Libiola's mine, Italy
North America
- Argo Tunnel, Idaho Springs, Colorado, USA
- Berkeley Pit superfund site, covering the Clark Fork River and 50,000 acres (200 km²) in and around Butte, Montana, USA
- The Summitville Mine in Rio Grande County, Colorado. The area has both natural and mining-exacerbated acid drainage flowing into the Wrightman Fork, then into the Alamosa River, which flows into the San Luis Valley
- Britannia Beach, British Columbia, Canada
- Clinch-Powell River system, Virginia and Tennessee, USA
- Iron Mountain Mine, Shasta County, California, United States
- Monday Creek, Ohio, USA
- The Irwin Syncline in Southwestern Pennsylvania
- Pronto mine tailings site, Elliot Lake area, Ontario, Canada
- North Fork of Kentucky River, Kentucky, USA
- Old Forge borehole, Lackawanna River, Pennsylvania. Discharges between 40-100 million gallons of acid mine drainage per day.
- Cheat River Watershed, West Virginia, USA
- Copperas Brook Watershed, from the Elizabeth Mine in S. Strafford, Vermont, impacting the Ompompanoosuc River
- Davis Pyrite Mine in NW Massachusetts
- Hughes bore hole, Pennsylvania
- Gold King Mine, Colorado, USA
Oceania
- Brukunga, South Australia
- Grasberg mine, Papua province, Indonesia
- McArthur River zinc mine, Northern Territory, Australia
- Mount Morgan Mine, Queensland, Australia
- Ok Tedi environmental disaster caused by Ok Tedi Mine, Ok Tedi River, Papua New Guinea
- Tui mine, an abandoned mine on the western slopes of Mount Te Aroha in the Kaimai Range of New Zealand, considered to be the most contaminated site in the country
- West Coast mineral fields, Tasmania, Australia