Prediction of Aluminum, Uranium, and Co-Contaminants
Precipitation and Adsorption during Titration of Acidic Sediments
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Abstract
Batch and column recirculation titration
tests were performed with
contaminated acidic sediments. A generic geochemical model was developed
combining precipitation, cation exchange, and surface complexation
reactions to describe the observed pH and metal ion concentrations
in experiments with or without the presence of CO<sub>2</sub>. Experimental
results showed a slow pH increase due to strong buffering by Al hydrolysis
and precipitation and CO<sub>2</sub> uptake. The cation concentrations
generally decreased at higher pH than those observed in previous tests
without CO<sub>2</sub>. Using amorphous Al颅(OH)<sub>3</sub> and basaluminite
precipitation reactions and a cation exchange selectivity coefficient <i>K</i><sub>Na\Al</sub> of 0.3, the model approximately described
the observed (1) pH titration curve, (2) Ca, Mg, and Mn concentration
by cation exchange, and (3) U concentrations by surface complexation
with Fe hydroxides at pH < 5 and with liebigite (Ca<sub>2</sub>UO<sub>2</sub>(CO<sub>3</sub>)<sub>3</sub>路10H<sub>2</sub>O)
precipitation at pH > 5. The model indicated that the formation
of
aqueous carbonate complexes and competition with carbonate for surface
sites could inhibit U and Ni adsorption and precipitation. Our results
suggested that the uncertainty in basaluminite solubility is an important
source of prediction uncertainty and ignoring labile solid phase Al
underestimates the base requirement in titration of acidic sediments