4.8 Article

Mechanism of Vanadium Leaching during Surface Weathering of Basic Oxygen Furnace Steel Slag Blocks: A Microfocus X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy and Electron Microscopy Study

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 14, Pages 7823-7830

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b00874

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.K. Natural Environment Research Council Ph.D. studentship
  2. U.K. NERC [NE/L01405X/1]
  3. [SP12696]
  4. NERC [NE/K015648/1, NE/L01405X/1, NE/L014211/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/L01405X/1, NE/K015648/1, NE/L014211/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Basic oxygen furnace (BOF) steelmaking, slag is enriched in potentially toxic V which may become mobilized in high pH leachate during weathering. BOF slag was weathered under aerated and air-excluded conditions for 6 months prior to SEM/EDS and mu XANES analysis to determine V host phases and, speciation in both primary and secondary phases. Leached blocks show development of an altered region in which free lime and dicalcium silicate phases were absent and Ca-Si-H was precipitated (CaCO3 was also present under aerated conditions). mu XANES analyses show that V was released to solution as V(V) during dicalcium silicate dissolution and some V was incorporated into neo-formed Ca-Si-H. Higher V concentrations were observed in leachate under aerated conditions than in the air-excluded leaching experiment. Aqueous V concentrations were controlled by Ca-3(VO4)(2) solubility, which demonstrate an inverse relationship between Ca and V concentrations. Under air-excluded conditions Ca concentrations were controlled by dicakium silicate dissolution and Ca-Si-H precipitation, leading to relatively high Ca and correspondingly low V concentrations. Formation of CaCO3 under aerated conditions provided a sink for aqueous Ca, allowing higher V concentrations limited by kinetic dissolution rates of dicalcium silicate. Thus, V release may be slowed by the precipitation of secondary phases in the altered region, improving the prospects for slag reuse.

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