Conference Proceedings
Tailings and Mine Waste Management for the 21st Century 2015
Conference Proceedings
Tailings and Mine Waste Management for the 21st Century 2015
Sludge Conditioning Technology to Reduce Sludge and the Cost of Acid Mine Drainage Treatment
Veolia Water Technologies was contracted by a global coal mining company to design a retrofit acid mine drainage treatment facility using DenseSludge technology on a former coal refuse disposal site. The project constraint was to reuse current facilities in order to reduce additional capital work cost and avoid additional footprint requirements while improving treatment performance and reducing sludge production and chemical consumption. The initial installation of 454 m3/h served as a pilot plant to demonstrate the benefits of the process and ultimately provided design criteria for the new facility. The pilot demonstrated the benefit of the technology by reducing sludge volume by 90 per cent compared to conventional processes currently in use. The sludge that is reinjected into the mine contains less water, which reduces the volume of water that returns to the mine pool for treatment and mine water balance. Furthermore, the pilot plant reduced lime usage compared to conventional processes by operating at a lower pH set point, demonstrating steady pH control and stoichiometric lime utilisation.CITATION:Dube, C and Banerjee, K, 2015. Sludge conditioning technology to reduce sludge and the cost of acid mine drainage treatment, in Proceedings Tailings and Mine Waste Management for the 21st Century , pp 105-110 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Contributor(s):
C Dube, K Banerjee
-
Sludge Conditioning Technology to Reduce Sludge and the Cost of Acid Mine Drainage TreatmentPDFThis product is exclusive to Digital library subscription
-
Sludge Conditioning Technology to Reduce Sludge and the Cost of Acid Mine Drainage TreatmentPDFNormal price $22.00Member price from $0.00
Fees above are GST inclusive
PD Hours
Approved activity
- Published: 2014
- PDF Size: 8.469 Mb.
- Unique ID: P201506013