textjournal article
Method to Attenuate U(VI) Mobility in Acidic Waste Plumes Using Humic Acids
Abstract
Acidic uranium (U) groundwater plumes have resulted from acid-extraction of plutonium during the Cold War and from U mining and milling operations. A sustainable method for in situ immobilization of U under acidic conditions is not yet available. Here, we propose to use humic acids (HAs) for in situ U immobilization in acidic waste plumes. Our laboratory batch experiments show that HA can adsorb onto aquifer sediments rapidly, strongly and practically irreversibly. Adding HA greatly enhanced U adsorption capacity to sediments at pH below 5.0. Our column experiments using historically contaminated sediments from the Savannah River Site under slow flow rates (120 and 12 m/year) show that desorption of U and HA were nondetectable over 100 pore-volumes of leaching with simulated acidic groundwaters. Upon HA-treatment, 99% of the contaminant [U] was immobilized at pH ≤ 4.5, compared to 5% and 58% immobilized in the control columns at pH 3.5 and 4.5, respectively. These results indicate that HA-treatment is a promising in situ remediation method for acidic U waste plumes. As a remediation reagent, HAs are resistant to biodegradation, cost-effective, nontoxic, and easily introducible to the subsurface- Text
- Journal contribution
- Biotechnology
- Ecology
- Immunology
- Inorganic Chemistry
- Space Science
- Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Chemical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- pH 3.5
- acidic conditions
- acidic waste plumes
- milling operations
- Savannah River Site
- Humic AcidsAcidic uranium
- column experiments
- U adsorption capacity
- remediation method
- remediation reagent
- groundwater plumes
- aquifer sediments
- Acidic Waste Plumes
- control columns
- laboratory batch experiments show
- acidic U waste plumes
- U immobilization
- Cold War
- HA
- U mining
- use humic acids
- acidic groundwaters