Geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization

© 2018 Elsevier B.V. The present study aimed to characterize key physico-chemical and mineralogical attributes of magnetite iron (Fe) ore tailings to identify potential constraints limiting in situ soil formation and direct phytostabilization. Tailings of different age, together with undisturbed loc...

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Main Authors: Wu, S., Liu, Y., Southam, G., Robertson, L., Chiu, T., Cross, Adam, Dixon, Kingsley, Stevens, J., Zhong, H., Chan, T., Lu, Y., Huang, L.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2019
Online Access:http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IC150100041
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/71620
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author Wu, S.
Liu, Y.
Southam, G.
Robertson, L.
Chiu, T.
Cross, Adam
Dixon, Kingsley
Stevens, J.
Zhong, H.
Chan, T.
Lu, Y.
Huang, L.
author_facet Wu, S.
Liu, Y.
Southam, G.
Robertson, L.
Chiu, T.
Cross, Adam
Dixon, Kingsley
Stevens, J.
Zhong, H.
Chan, T.
Lu, Y.
Huang, L.
author_sort Wu, S.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2018 Elsevier B.V. The present study aimed to characterize key physico-chemical and mineralogical attributes of magnetite iron (Fe) ore tailings to identify potential constraints limiting in situ soil formation and direct phytostabilization. Tailings of different age, together with undisturbed local native soils, were sampled from a magnetite mine in Western Australia. Tailings were extremely alkaline (pH > 9.0), with a lack of water stable aggregate and organic matter, and contained abundant primary minerals including mica (e.g., biotite), with low specific surface area (N2-BET around 1.2 m2 g-1). These conditions remained relatively unchanged after four years’ aging under field conditions. Chemical extraction and spectroscopic analysis [e.g., X-ray diffraction (XRD) and synchrotron-based Fe K edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (XAFS) analysis] revealed that the aging process decreased biotite-like minerals, but increased hematite and magnetite in the tailings. However, the aged tailings lacked goethite, a compound abundant in natural soils. Examination using backscattered-scanning electron microscope - energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry (BSE-SEM-EDS) revealed that aged tailings contained discrete sharp edged Fe-bearing minerals that did not physically integrate with other minerals (e.g., Si/Al bearing minerals). In contrast, Fe minerals in native soils appeared randomly distributed and closely amassed with Si/Al rich phyllosilicates, with highly eroded edges. The lack of labile organic matter and the persistence of alkaline-saline conditions may have significantly hindered the bioweathering of Fe-minerals and the biogenic formation of secondary Fe-minerals in tailings. However, there is signature that a native pioneer plant, Maireana brevifolia can facilitate the bioweathering of Fe-bearing minerals in tailings. We propose that eco-engineering inputs like organic carbon accumulation, together with the introduction of functional microbes and pioneer plants, should be adopted to accelerate bioweathering of Fe-bearing minerals as a priority for initiating in situ soil formation in the Fe ore tailings.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2019
publisher Elsevier
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-716202022-01-06T07:34:15Z Geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization Wu, S. Liu, Y. Southam, G. Robertson, L. Chiu, T. Cross, Adam Dixon, Kingsley Stevens, J. Zhong, H. Chan, T. Lu, Y. Huang, L. © 2018 Elsevier B.V. The present study aimed to characterize key physico-chemical and mineralogical attributes of magnetite iron (Fe) ore tailings to identify potential constraints limiting in situ soil formation and direct phytostabilization. Tailings of different age, together with undisturbed local native soils, were sampled from a magnetite mine in Western Australia. Tailings were extremely alkaline (pH > 9.0), with a lack of water stable aggregate and organic matter, and contained abundant primary minerals including mica (e.g., biotite), with low specific surface area (N2-BET around 1.2 m2 g-1). These conditions remained relatively unchanged after four years’ aging under field conditions. Chemical extraction and spectroscopic analysis [e.g., X-ray diffraction (XRD) and synchrotron-based Fe K edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (XAFS) analysis] revealed that the aging process decreased biotite-like minerals, but increased hematite and magnetite in the tailings. However, the aged tailings lacked goethite, a compound abundant in natural soils. Examination using backscattered-scanning electron microscope - energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry (BSE-SEM-EDS) revealed that aged tailings contained discrete sharp edged Fe-bearing minerals that did not physically integrate with other minerals (e.g., Si/Al bearing minerals). In contrast, Fe minerals in native soils appeared randomly distributed and closely amassed with Si/Al rich phyllosilicates, with highly eroded edges. The lack of labile organic matter and the persistence of alkaline-saline conditions may have significantly hindered the bioweathering of Fe-minerals and the biogenic formation of secondary Fe-minerals in tailings. However, there is signature that a native pioneer plant, Maireana brevifolia can facilitate the bioweathering of Fe-bearing minerals in tailings. We propose that eco-engineering inputs like organic carbon accumulation, together with the introduction of functional microbes and pioneer plants, should be adopted to accelerate bioweathering of Fe-bearing minerals as a priority for initiating in situ soil formation in the Fe ore tailings. 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/71620 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.09.171 http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IC150100041 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Wu, S.
Liu, Y.
Southam, G.
Robertson, L.
Chiu, T.
Cross, Adam
Dixon, Kingsley
Stevens, J.
Zhong, H.
Chan, T.
Lu, Y.
Huang, L.
Geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization
title Geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization
title_full Geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization
title_fullStr Geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization
title_full_unstemmed Geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization
title_short Geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization
title_sort geochemical and mineralogical constraints in iron ore tailings limit soil formation for direct phytostabilization
url http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IC150100041
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/71620