Paper No. 3
Presentation Time: 8:50 AM
CATHODE PROTECTION AND CONTROL OF AMD
Acid mine (or rock) drainage AMD or ARD forms when metal sulfides are exposed to water and oxygen. For pyrite, the acid producing reaction is usually simplified to: 2FeS2 + 7.5O2 + 7H2O = 2Fe(OH)3 + 8H+ + 4SO42- (Stumm and Morgan 1996)(1). A pH of 3 or less is generated and the commonest approach to amelioration is to add lime, a treatment of the symptoms rather than the disease. Alternatively, the problem can be attacked pre-emptively, by preventing the formation of AMD at source, using a technique similar to that employed in the prevention of corrosion by oxidation in metal structures (cathode protection). Corrosion is prevented by converting the structure into a cathode by coupling it with a sacrificial anode. The anode acts as a source of electrons, which move to the cathode through whatever aqueous phase permeates the local environment (groundwater, sea-water or existing AMD for example). The cathode is thereby prevented from oxidizing. Now consider the oxidation of pyrite in terms of the following electron-producing half-reaction: FeS2 + 11H2O = Fe(OH)3 + 19H+ + 2SO42- + 15e- (compare Carlson et al., 1992)(2). In nature O2 is the common electron acceptor. Creating an electrochemical cell with pyrite as cathode provides a mechanism for pumping electrons into the right hand side of the half-reaction, stabilizing pyrite and preventing the formation of AMD. This simple set-up was first tested at the Sherman Mine in Northern Ontario as part of the PhD thesis of Gene Shelp. There, a sulphide ore body was wired to a scrap-iron anode and using the ambient AMD of a mine pit as battery fluid, a galvanic cell was maintained for 9 months. A parallel laboratory experiment was performed to demonstrate a rise in pH from 3 to 5.7. Ideally, to minimize AMD,a site would be wired before commencement of mining. However, post-operational treatment of AMD is also feasible and a particulate mixture of sulphide and a more electropositive metal may be employed as a mini-galvanic filter to treat existing AMD (Chesworth & Shelp, 2001)(3). (1) "Aquatic Chemistry" Wiley-Interscience: NY. (2) Applied & Environmental Microbiology 58: 1046-9. (3) ARCSACC Proceedings 01: 240-244.