4.7 Article

Reducing conditions increased the mobilisation and hazardous effects of arsenic in a highly contaminated gold mine spoil

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 436, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.129238

Keywords

Toxic elements; Gold mining; Flooding; Mobilization; Hazardous effects

Funding

  1. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) [91560903]

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The mobilisation and speciation of arsenic in polluted gold mine sites in tropical climates are not well understood. This study investigated the impact of soil redox potential on the mobilisation of arsenic and its dominant species in an abandoned spoil. The results showed that arsenic mobilisation increased under moderately reducing conditions and decreased under oxic conditions. The dominant species of arsenic varied with redox conditions, with As(V) dominating under oxic conditions and As(III) predominating under moderately reducing conditions.
Arsenic (As) redox-induced mobilisation and speciation in polluted gold mine sites in tropical climates largely remains unknown. Here, we investigated the impact of changes in soil redox potential (EH) (-54 mV to +429 mV) on mobilisation of As and its dominant species in an abandoned spoil (total As = 4283 mg/kg) using an automated biogeochemical microcosm set-up. Arsenic mobilisation increased (85-137 mg/L) at moderately reducing conditions (-54 mV to + 200 mV)), while its reduced (6-35 mg/L) under oxic conditions (+200 to +400 mV). This indicates the high risk of As potential loss under reducing conditions. The mobilisation of As was governed by the redox chemistry of Fe. XANES and EXAFS analyses showed that sorbed-As(V)-goethite, sorbed- As(III)-ferrihydrite, scorodite and arsenopyrite were the predominant As species in the mine spoil. As(V) dominated at oxic conditions and As(III) predominated at moderately reducing conditions, which may be attributed to either inability of arsenate bacteria to reduce As or incomplete reduction. Lower Fe/As molar ratios during moderately reducing conditions show that the mine spoil may migrate As to watercourses during flooding, which may increase the hazardous effects of this toxic element. Therefore, encouraging aerobic conditions may mitigate As release and potential loss from the mine field.

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