The Displacement And Migration Of Ammonium Ions From Uranium In Situ Leaching Sites

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Mark P. Walsh Robert S. Schecter Michael J. Humenick
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
501 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

In recent years in situ leach mining has emerged as a viable technology for the recovery of uranium from strata in South Texas which contain relatively low concentrations of uranium ore. Because the ore bodies lie within ground-water aquifers, a significant determinant in the economics is the requirement that such aquifers be protected from contamination. Since ammonia is one of the constituents of the leach solutions now being field tested, one environmental problem to be resolved is the removal of ammonia at the end of mining. A second related question is the fate of the ammonia which is not removed by the restoration procedure. This paper considers the displacement and migration of ammonium in a flowing electrolyte with concomitant ion exchange. The ion exchange is an important feature since, during the solution mining phase, ammonium saturates the mineral exchange sites and must be removed from these sites. A mathematical model is used to simulate this process and the model is tested against the results of laborator.y experiments. It is found that the simulations are adequate if an appropriate selection of parameters is made. The model is then used to investigate the effect of cation composition and concentration of the restoration medium as well as dispersion on the overall effectiveness of the process. It is concluded that increasing the concentration of monovalent ions in a solution containing a mixture of both monovalent and divalent ions decreases the adsorption selectivity of the divalent ions with respect to all monovalent ions including ammonium. Thus increasing the ionic concentration of a restoration fluid by increasing the concentration of a nonselectively adsorbed (with respect to ammonium) ion may have a very limited benefit.
Citation

APA: Mark P. Walsh Robert S. Schecter Michael J. Humenick  (1979)  The Displacement And Migration Of Ammonium Ions From Uranium In Situ Leaching Sites

MLA: Mark P. Walsh Robert S. Schecter Michael J. Humenick The Displacement And Migration Of Ammonium Ions From Uranium In Situ Leaching Sites. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1979.

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