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| Last Updated:: 22/05/2014

Leaching of elements from coal fly ash: Assessment of its potential for use in filling abandoned coal mines

 

 

 

Leaching of elements from coal fly ash: Assessment of its potential for use in filling abandoned coal mines

 

Binay K. Dutta a,*, Swapan Khanra b, Durjoy Mallick b

a The Petroleum Institute, Abu Dhabi, UAE
b Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Calcutta 92, A.P.C. Road, Kolkata – 700009, India

 

 

Leaching of ten elements – namely, Fe, Mn, Ca, Na, K, Cu, Cr, Zn, As and Pb – from four fly ash samples collected from four different coal-fired thermal power plants in West Bengal, India, has been reported. The leaching conditions were selected to broadly simulate that of surface coal mines in order to estimate the usefulness of the materials for back-filling of abandoned mines and to assess the possibility of contamination of the sites by release of heavy metal ions. Sequential batch leaching consisted of four cycles each of seven days duration; the long-term leaching continued over a period of 180 days. The starting pH of the leaching solutions ranged from strongly acidic to strongly basic. The leaching pattern and its dependence on the pH as well as the solid–liquid ratio have been critically analyzed. A much higher mobility of the elements have been expectedly observed at a low pH. Less leaching is found at a high pH except for arsenic. The mobilization pattern is strongly governed by the well-known phenomenon of dissolution and re-precipitation of iron with co-precipitation of a series of elements depending upon the pH of the medium. Extraction equilibrium was reached for Ca, Fe, Na and Zn at certain pH values. A monotonic trend of release for the elements Mn, K, Cu, Pb, Cr and As persisted over the long-term leaching period of 180 days. The alkalinity or the calcium content of an ash sample greatly determines the leaching pattern if the solution pH is neutral or mildly acidic. It appears that the risk pollution of ground water as well as of surface water may not be avoidable if fly ash alone is used for mine back-filling in an environment where acid mine drainage is prominent. Nevertheless blending with lime to enhance the alkalinity appears to offer a practical solution to the problem.

 

 

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