The Geochemical and Mineralogical Controls on the Environmental Mobility of Rare Earth Elements From Tailings, Nechalacho Deposit, Northwest Territories

Thesis (Master, Geological Sciences & Geological Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2014-05-28 11:06:41.351 Increased demand for rare earth elements (REEs) for applications in modern technologies has led to an increase in REE exploration. Several deposits are expected to begin mining withi...

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Main Author: Purdy, Colin
Other Authors: Jamieson, Heather E., Geological Sciences and Geological Engineering
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
MLA
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1974/12206
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftqueensuniv:oai:qspace.library.queensu.ca:1974/12206 2023-05-15T17:46:40+02:00 The Geochemical and Mineralogical Controls on the Environmental Mobility of Rare Earth Elements From Tailings, Nechalacho Deposit, Northwest Territories Purdy, Colin Jamieson, Heather E. Geological Sciences and Geological Engineering 2014-05-28 11:06:41.351 http://hdl.handle.net/1974/12206 eng eng Canadian theses http://hdl.handle.net/1974/12206 This publication is made available by the authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research and may not be copied or reproduced except as permitted by the copyright laws without written authority from the copyright owner. Geochemistry Speciation Sorption Rare Earth Elements Colloids PHREEQC Lanthanides MLA Synchrotron Tailings Mine Waste Aqueous Mobility thesis 2014 ftqueensuniv 2020-12-29T09:08:07Z Thesis (Master, Geological Sciences & Geological Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2014-05-28 11:06:41.351 Increased demand for rare earth elements (REEs) for applications in modern technologies has led to an increase in REE exploration. Several deposits are expected to begin mining within a decade, but few studies have examined the possible environmental effects created by these mines. Metal toxicity is thought to be greater in aqueous environments when metals occur as free ions rather than complexes, and the speciation can also impact the treatment technologies utilized to reduce metal concentrations. This research investigates the mineralogical source of REEs and the mechanism of REE mobility in low-temperature waters that have interacted with pilot plant tailings from the Nechalacho deposit, Northwest Territories. The Nechalacho deposit is owned by Avalon Rare Metals Inc. and located approximately 100 km east of Yellowknife. The deposit is hosted within a hydrothermally altered layered nepheline-sodalite syenite in the peralkaline Blatchford Lake complex. The main REE ore minerals are zircon, fergusonite, allanite, monazite, bastnäsite, and synchisite-parasite. Characterization of the tailings using mineral liberation analyzer (MLA) show that the ore minerals are fine grained and well liberated. Bastnäsite and synchisite-parasite are the only potentially soluble ore minerals at low temperature and near-neutral pH. Shake flask experiments were designed to simulate the interaction of tailings with three different leach waters to identify soluble phases and mobile elements. Decanted solutions from the shake flasks were filtered to 0.45µm and 0.01µm. Speciation modelling of the 0.01µm filtrate suggests that carbonate ligands will form the dominant complexes with the REEs, and <2% occur as free metal ions. Higher proportions of LREEs (1-6%) occur as free metal ions than HREEs (<1%) and LREEs occur in higher concentrations (2 to 8 times greater) than the HREE. REEs were found in the colloidal fraction ([REEcolloid] = [REE0.45µm] – [REE0.01µm]). Ionic strength is the dominant control on distribution of REEs between colloidal and dissolved fraction. Colloids captured on filters from ultrafiltration analyzed using scanning electron microscopy and synchrotron microanalysis show REEs are hosted in colloidal rare earth minerals (e.g. zircon) and also show colloidal humic acid, Fe-oxides and Mn-oxides. Speciation modeling shows that REE sorption to these phases is probable. M.A.Sc. Thesis Northwest Territories Yellowknife Queen's University, Ontario: QSpace Northwest Territories Yellowknife Blatchford Lake ENVELOPE(-112.584,-112.584,62.184,62.184)
institution Open Polar
collection Queen's University, Ontario: QSpace
op_collection_id ftqueensuniv
language English
topic Geochemistry
Speciation
Sorption
Rare Earth Elements
Colloids
PHREEQC
Lanthanides
MLA
Synchrotron
Tailings
Mine Waste
Aqueous Mobility
spellingShingle Geochemistry
Speciation
Sorption
Rare Earth Elements
Colloids
PHREEQC
Lanthanides
MLA
Synchrotron
Tailings
Mine Waste
Aqueous Mobility
Purdy, Colin
The Geochemical and Mineralogical Controls on the Environmental Mobility of Rare Earth Elements From Tailings, Nechalacho Deposit, Northwest Territories
topic_facet Geochemistry
Speciation
Sorption
Rare Earth Elements
Colloids
PHREEQC
Lanthanides
MLA
Synchrotron
Tailings
Mine Waste
Aqueous Mobility
description Thesis (Master, Geological Sciences & Geological Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2014-05-28 11:06:41.351 Increased demand for rare earth elements (REEs) for applications in modern technologies has led to an increase in REE exploration. Several deposits are expected to begin mining within a decade, but few studies have examined the possible environmental effects created by these mines. Metal toxicity is thought to be greater in aqueous environments when metals occur as free ions rather than complexes, and the speciation can also impact the treatment technologies utilized to reduce metal concentrations. This research investigates the mineralogical source of REEs and the mechanism of REE mobility in low-temperature waters that have interacted with pilot plant tailings from the Nechalacho deposit, Northwest Territories. The Nechalacho deposit is owned by Avalon Rare Metals Inc. and located approximately 100 km east of Yellowknife. The deposit is hosted within a hydrothermally altered layered nepheline-sodalite syenite in the peralkaline Blatchford Lake complex. The main REE ore minerals are zircon, fergusonite, allanite, monazite, bastnäsite, and synchisite-parasite. Characterization of the tailings using mineral liberation analyzer (MLA) show that the ore minerals are fine grained and well liberated. Bastnäsite and synchisite-parasite are the only potentially soluble ore minerals at low temperature and near-neutral pH. Shake flask experiments were designed to simulate the interaction of tailings with three different leach waters to identify soluble phases and mobile elements. Decanted solutions from the shake flasks were filtered to 0.45µm and 0.01µm. Speciation modelling of the 0.01µm filtrate suggests that carbonate ligands will form the dominant complexes with the REEs, and <2% occur as free metal ions. Higher proportions of LREEs (1-6%) occur as free metal ions than HREEs (<1%) and LREEs occur in higher concentrations (2 to 8 times greater) than the HREE. REEs were found in the colloidal fraction ([REEcolloid] = [REE0.45µm] – [REE0.01µm]). Ionic strength is the dominant control on distribution of REEs between colloidal and dissolved fraction. Colloids captured on filters from ultrafiltration analyzed using scanning electron microscopy and synchrotron microanalysis show REEs are hosted in colloidal rare earth minerals (e.g. zircon) and also show colloidal humic acid, Fe-oxides and Mn-oxides. Speciation modeling shows that REE sorption to these phases is probable. M.A.Sc.
author2 Jamieson, Heather E.
Geological Sciences and Geological Engineering
format Thesis
author Purdy, Colin
author_facet Purdy, Colin
author_sort Purdy, Colin
title The Geochemical and Mineralogical Controls on the Environmental Mobility of Rare Earth Elements From Tailings, Nechalacho Deposit, Northwest Territories
title_short The Geochemical and Mineralogical Controls on the Environmental Mobility of Rare Earth Elements From Tailings, Nechalacho Deposit, Northwest Territories
title_full The Geochemical and Mineralogical Controls on the Environmental Mobility of Rare Earth Elements From Tailings, Nechalacho Deposit, Northwest Territories
title_fullStr The Geochemical and Mineralogical Controls on the Environmental Mobility of Rare Earth Elements From Tailings, Nechalacho Deposit, Northwest Territories
title_full_unstemmed The Geochemical and Mineralogical Controls on the Environmental Mobility of Rare Earth Elements From Tailings, Nechalacho Deposit, Northwest Territories
title_sort geochemical and mineralogical controls on the environmental mobility of rare earth elements from tailings, nechalacho deposit, northwest territories
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1974/12206
long_lat ENVELOPE(-112.584,-112.584,62.184,62.184)
geographic Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
Blatchford Lake
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
Blatchford Lake
genre Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
genre_facet Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
op_relation Canadian theses
http://hdl.handle.net/1974/12206
op_rights This publication is made available by the authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research and may not be copied or reproduced except as permitted by the copyright laws without written authority from the copyright owner.
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