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Assessment of 226Ra and U colloidal transport in a mining environment.

Authors :
Reymond, Marine
Descostes, Michael
Besançon, Clémence
Leermakers, Martine
Billon, Sophie
Cherfallot, Gaël
Muguet, Marie
Beaucaire, Catherine
Smolikova, Vendula
Patrier, Patricia
Source :
Chemosphere. Oct2023, Vol. 338, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The colloidal transport of trace (Fe, Al, Ba, Pb, Sr, U) and ultra-trace (226Ra) elements was studied in a mining environment. An original approach combining 0.45 μm filtered water sampling, the Diffusive Gradient in Thin films (DGT) technique, mineralogical characterization, and geochemical modelling was developed and tested at 17 sampling points. DGT was used for the truly dissolved fraction of the elements of interest, while the 0.45 μm filtration includes both colloidal and truly dissolved fractions (together referred to as total dissolved fraction). Results indicated a colloidal fraction for Al (up to 50%), Ba (up to 86%), and Fe (up to 99%) explained by the presence of submicrometric grains of kaolinite, barite, and ferrihydrite, respectively. Furthermore, the total dissolved 226Ra concentration in the water samples reached up to 10–25 Bq/L (1.2–3.0 10−12 mol/L) at 3 sampling points, while the truly dissolved aqueous 226Ra concentrations were in the mBq/L range. Such high total dissolved concentrations are explained by retention on colloidal barite, accounting for 95% of the total dissolved 226Ra concentration. The distribution of 226Ra between the truly dissolved and colloidal fractions was accurately reproduced using a (Ra x ,Ba 1-x)SO 4 solid solution, with values of the Guggenheim parameter a 0 close to ideality. 226Ra sorption on ferrihydrite and kaolinite, other minerals well known for their retention properties, could not explain the measured colloidal fractions despite their predominance. This illustrates the key role of barite in such environments. The measured concentrations of total dissolved U were very low at all the sampling points (<4.5 10−10 mol/L) and the colloidal fraction of U accounted for less than 65%. U sorption on ferrihydrite could account for the colloidal fraction. This original approach can be applied to other trace and ultra-trace elements to complement when necessary classical environmental surveys usually performed by filtration on 0.45 μm. [Display omitted] • An innovative approach was developed to assess the colloidal transport of 226Ra and U. • Water sampling, DGT, and solid characterization were combined with geochemical modelling. • 226Ra colloidal transport is explained by coprecipitation into barite. • This approach can be applied to other trace elements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00456535
Volume :
338
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169753479
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.139497