Multi-Stage Biological Treatment System for Removal of Heavy Metal Contaminants

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
W. F. A. Duncan A. G. Mattes W. D. Gould F. Goodazi
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
15
File Size:
1657 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

A biological treatment system designed to passively remove high concentrations of metals from leachate collected from a landfill near a large integrated zinc lead smelter has been in operation intermittently for the past five years including winter time operations. High metal removal efficiencies in the system were achieved. After 729 days of operation and treating over 8 million L of water the original anaerobic bioreactor constructed in 1997 was taken apart and rebuilt. The deconstruction of the bioreactor allowed systematic sampling at all depths of the biological matrix. Samples were analyzed for metal, S and TOC concentrations; as well bacterial populations were determined. Results of this sampling procedure are examined and compared at various depths within layers and between layers using one-way ANOVA and linear regressions. Metal concentrations were positively correlated with sulphur and negatively with total organic carbon. This is in concurrence with a model of biogenic precipitation of metal sulphides.
Citation

APA: W. F. A. Duncan A. G. Mattes W. D. Gould F. Goodazi  (2004)  Multi-Stage Biological Treatment System for Removal of Heavy Metal Contaminants

MLA: W. F. A. Duncan A. G. Mattes W. D. Gould F. Goodazi Multi-Stage Biological Treatment System for Removal of Heavy Metal Contaminants. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2004.

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