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1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University
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1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

1

Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs

Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E.Associate Professor

Civil EngineeringRowan University

Page 2: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

2

Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs

• Acid Mine Drainage

– Mines fill with water, seeps are formed

– Bacteria oxidize Pyrite (FeS2), often found w/ coal• End products create water with low pH, high metals, and

high acidity

– pH drops even more when water leaves mine• Oxidation and Hydrolysis

Page 3: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

3

Problems Caused by AMD?

• Low pH in seep water damages receiving stream ecosystem

• Metals in seep water precipitate and cover stream bottom

• Metal toxicity

Page 4: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

4

Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs

• Coal Combustion Products– High volume residues (ash) produced during

coal powered energy production

– Some CCPs are alkaline • Oxides/hydroxides may be present in raw coal or

form during combustion• Alkaline materials are used to control SO2

emissions, excess remains in ash

Page 5: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

5

How does the in-situ process work?

• Injection of Alkaline waste:

– Neutralizes acidity in mine

– Precipitates some metals in mine by pH adjustment

– Imparts alkalinity to seep water

Page 6: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

6

Overview

• Mine description• Injection description• Results• Interpretation• Conclusions

Page 7: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

7

Mine Plan View

Not to scale

Page 8: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

8

Mine Side View

PyriteOxidation

AMD Seep

Water Infiltration

Not to scale

pH = 4.4Zero Alkalinity

Page 9: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

9

35030025020015010050000

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

0.0

1.0

2.0

3.0

4.0

5.0

6.0Seep FlowRain

Day (August 1995 - July 1996)

Seep

Flo

w (

Lit

ers

/Min

ute

)

Rain

Fall

(in

ches)

No Data

Seep Flow and Rainfall

Page 10: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

10

Mine Hydrology - Tracer Studies• Estimated Mine Retention time ~ 5 yr

• Three Tracer Injections– Main Corridor (MC)

• Rhodamine WT (Rh) - 1 gallon, 20%– Florescent dye, 1 ppt detection limit– adsorption/precipitation problems

• Chloride (Cl) - 175 pounds of NaCl– 100 ppb detection limit

– Side Corridor (SC)• Chloride (300 pounds of NaCl)

Page 11: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

11

Tracer Injection Points

Page 12: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

12

Tracer Study Results

Test Breakthrough Recovery MC, Rh 11 hr <1 % (120 d) MC, Cl 9 hr* 11 % (30 d) SC, Cl 16 hr <0.3% (8 d)

* more frequent sampling than test 1

• Fast Breakthrough indicates some corridor flow, • Poor Recovery indicates mixing / diffusion

Page 13: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

13

Tracers In Wells

• Tracer concentrations throughout mine approached seep value– nearly identical after 100 days

• Injection point concentration stayed higher– “pool” of tracer?

• Mixing/diffusion -- important mine process

Page 14: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

14

Treatment description

• ~ 420 tons of ash injected...

• through five 2” injection wells...

• using Oil-field technology

Page 15: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

15

A flour truck (to right), used to bring FBA to the site. Pneumatic trailers are partially visible at the left.

Page 16: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

16

Grout truck and pneumatic trailers. The grout truck mixes FBA from the pneumatic trailers with water

from a frac tank, then injects the slurry into the mine.

Page 17: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

17

A close-up of the grout truck, used to mix and inject the FBA slurry into the mine.

Page 18: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

18

Total view of the site during injection. From Right to left: flour trucks, pneumatic trailers, grout truck, frac tank.

Page 19: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

19

Three frac tanks located at the seep. Seep is pipe in front of rightmost tank.

Page 20: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

20

Fire hose used to convey FBA slurry from the fixed location of the grout truck to the five well locations.

Page 21: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

21

Injection well. FBA was injected through the fire hose.

Page 22: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

22

Monitoring well, with pressure gauge. Little pressure increase was measured during injection

Page 23: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

23

Results and Interpretation

• Alkalinity and pH after Injection• Metal concentration in seep

• Interpretation of results– Phase I :Reaction of AMD with Ash– Phase II: Reaction & Mass Transfer of

CO2 with alkalinity – Phase III: Alkalinity consumption and flush

Page 24: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

24

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

pH

01002003004005006007008009001000

Alk

alin

ity

(p

pm

CaC

O3)

pH ALK

Seep pH and Alkalinity after Injection

Page 25: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

25

0

50

100

150

200

250

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

Fe

CO

NC

(p

pm

)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Mn

& A

l C

ON

C (

pp

m)

Fe Mn Al

Iron, Manganese, and Aluminum Concentrations in Seep

Page 26: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

26

Phase I - Quick Lime

• CaO + H2O --> Ca2+ + 2OH-

– Exothermic– Fast (over within hours of injection)– Immediate generation of alkalinity– High pH– Most metals precipitate as hydroxide

From the CCP

Page 27: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

27

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

pH

01002003004005006007008009001000

Alk

alin

ity

(p

pm

CaC

O3)

pH ALK

0

50

100

150

200

250

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

Fe

CO

NC

(p

pm

)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Mn

& A

l C

ON

C (

pp

m)

Fe Mn Al

Phase I

Page 28: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

28

Phase IIa - CO2 (aq) Reactions

• CO2 (aq) + 2OH- --> CO3 --

– may cause precipitation of CaCO3

– Some metals may precipitate as CO3s

• CO2 (aq) + CO3-- + H2O --> 2HCO3

-

Page 29: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

29

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

pH

01002003004005006007008009001000

Alk

alin

ity

(p

pm

CaC

O3)

pH ALK

CaCO3 Precipitation

Page 30: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

30

Phase IIb - CO2 (g) Mass Transfer

• What happens once the initial CO2 (aq) is consumed

– Mass Transfer from the mine headspace• CO2 (g) <--> CO2 (aq)

Page 31: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

31

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

pH

01002003004005006007008009001000

Alk

alin

ity

(p

pm

CaC

O3)

pH ALK

0

50

100

150

200

250

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

Fe

CO

NC

(p

pm

)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Mn

& A

l C

ON

C (

pp

m)

Fe Mn Al

Phase II

?

Page 32: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

32

Phase III

• Consumption of aqueous alkalinity in reaction with acid

• Flush of aqueous alkalinity• Dissolution of solid alkaline compounds

– CaCO3, MeOH, MeCO3

Page 33: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

33

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

pH

01002003004005006007008009001000

Alk

alin

ity

(p

pm

CaC

O3)

pH ALK

0

50

100

150

200

250

-20 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 380

TIME (days)

Fe

CO

NC

(p

pm

)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Mn

& A

l C

ON

C (

pp

m)

Fe Mn Al

Phase III

?

Page 34: 1 Abandoned Coal Mines: In-Situ Treatment of AMD with CCPs Jess W. Everett, Ph.D., P.E. Associate Professor Civil Engineering Rowan University.

34

Conclusions

• The injection of CCP increased pH and alkalinity

• The pH in the mine is influenced by CO2(g) in the mine headspace

• The longevity of treatment depends on acidity generation and seep flow