Publication Type:

Journal Article

Source:

Water, Air and Soil Pollution, Springer, Dordrecht, Netherlands, Volume 223, Number 7, p.3619-3641 (2012)

ISBN:

0049-6979

Keywords:

adsorption, alteration, bornite, Canada, complexing, concentration, copper, eastern canada, heavy metals, heazlewoodite, Hematite, industrial waste, Magnetite, metals, migration of elements, mineral composition, nanoparticles, NICKEL, Ontario, oxides, particulate materials, pollution, silicates, smelting, soils, solubility, spinel, Sudbury Ontario, sulfides, toxicity, waste disposal, weathered materials, weathering

Abstract:

Spherical particles have been sampled from soils and silica-rich rock coatings close to major smelter centers at Coppercliff, Coniston, and Falconbridge in the Sudbury area, Canada. Detailed analyses employing optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, micro-Raman spectroscopy, and Mossbauer spectroscopy have been conducted to elucidate their nature, origin and potential alteration. The spherical particles are on the nano- to millimeter-size range and are composed principally of magnetite, hematite, Fe-silicates (olivine, pyroxenes), heazlewoodite, bornite, pyrrhotite, spinels (including trevorite and cuprospinel), delafossite, and cuprite or tenorite. The spinels present have variable Cu and Ni contents, whereas delafossite and cuprite are Ni free. Texturally, the spherical particles are composed of a Fe-oxide-Fe-silicate matrix with sulfide inclusions. The matrix displays growth features of a Fe-rich phase that commonly form during rapid cooling and transformation processes within smelter and converter facilities. Examination of weathered spherical particles indicates that some sulfide inclusions have dissolved prior to the alteration of the Fe-silicates and oxides and that the weathering of Fe-silicates occurs simultaneously with the transformation of magnetite into hematite. A higher proportion of Cu vs. Ni in the clay and organic fraction noted in the Sudbury soils is explained by (1) the formation of stronger adsorption complexes between Cu and the corresponding surface species and (2) the preferential release of Cu vs. Ni by smelter-derived particles. The latter mechanism is based on the observations that (a) cuprospinels have higher dissolution rates than Ni spinels, (b) a larger proportion of Cu occurs in the nanometer-size (and thus more soluble) fraction of the emitted particles, and (c) Ni spinels of relatively low solubility form in the alteration zone of heazlewoodite inclusions. Copyright 2012 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

Notes:

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