Treatment of Acid Sulfate Soil Drainage By Direct Application of Alkaline Reagents
2007
Green, R. | Waite, T.D. | Melville, M.D.
Due to the episodic nature of rainfall and the high dissolved metal concentrations in the acid sulfate soil catchment of Clothiers Creek (NSW, Australia), active treatment was considered more appropriate than passive treatment. Alkaline reagents were added to oxidised shallow drains to remove acidities ranging from 438 to 1,837 mg/L CaCO₃. A fine limestone slurry was produced from the pounding together of limestone rock fragments within a rotating drum and, on addition to drain waters, was found to remove acidity to varying degrees of effectiveness (from 12 to 100%). The efficiency decreased as the pH of the water approached neutrality due to calcite saturation and the slow reaction rate of limestone at high pH. Hydrated lime powder was also mixed with drain water in the rotating drum though most mixing occurred once the slurry entered the drain where efficiencies ranging from 67 to 89% were observed. A powdered mixture of MgCO₃ and CaCO₃ was only 11% effective in treatment of the drainage water due to the slow rate of reaction of MgCO₃. Whilst the active treatment system was capable of treating a large acidity flux (particularly using hydrated lime) it required regular addition of reagent and the dosing of hydrated lime was particularly difficult to control. Future designs of this active treatment system should be automated to prevent adverse aquatic impacts due to overdosing.
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