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Article

Evaluation of Dispersed Alkaline Substrate and Diffusive Exchange System Technologies for the Passive Treatment of Copper Mining Acid Drainage

1
Departamento de Ingeniería Civil, Universidad de Concepción, Edmundo Larenas 219, Concepción 4070386, Chile
2
Facultad de Ingeniería y Tecnología, Universidad San Sebastián, Lientur 1457, Concepción 4080871, Chile
3
Golder Associates (UK) Ltd, Bourne End SL8, UK
4
School of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Queensland, St Lucia 4067, Australia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Water 2020, 12(3), 854; https://doi.org/10.3390/w12030854
Submission received: 13 February 2020 / Revised: 7 March 2020 / Accepted: 13 March 2020 / Published: 18 March 2020
(This article belongs to the Section Wastewater Treatment and Reuse)

Abstract

:
The study evaluates the performance of the novel ADES (alkaline diffusive exchange System), SDES (sulfidogenic diffusive exchange system) and DAS (Dispersed Alkaline Substrate) technologies for the passive treatment of high-strength acid mine drainage (AMD) from copper mining (pH~3, 633 mg Cu L−1). The chemical DAS and ADES prototypes showed the best performance in the removal of Cu, Al, and Zn (98–100%), while the biochemical SDES reactors achieved a high sulfate removal rate (average of 0.28 mol m−3 day-1). Notably, the DES technology was effective in protecting the sulfate-reducing communities from the high toxicity of the AMD, and also in maintaining bed permeability, an aspect that was key in the ADES reactor. The DAS reactor showed the highest reactivity, accumulating the metallic precipitates in a lower reactor volume, allowing to conclude that it requires the lowest hydraulic residence time among all the reactors. However, the concentration of precipitates resulted in the formation of a hardpan, which may trigger the need of removing it to avoid compromising the continuity of the treatment process. This study suggests the development of new treatment alternatives by combining the strengths of each technology in combined or serial treatments.

1. Introduction

Acid mine drainage (AMD) is an effluent from the mining industry generated by the interaction of mining waste derived from the extraction and processing of the ore (waste rock deposits and tailing dams), with environmental factors, mainly water, oxygen and microorganisms [1,2,3]. The acidic pH between −3.6 and 6 and the high concentrations of sulfate and heavy metals that characterize AMD are the result of oxidation reactions of sulfur minerals and leaching of associated elements [4]. In the case of Chile, the most significant sources of AMD are the cordilleran copper deposits during snowmelt, which are located in the central zone of the country. Recently, research on its treatment has increased [5,6,7,8,9]. A particularity of this AMD is that it presents high concentrations of copper, which can be recovered economically [8]. In the United States, copper mining is significant in Utah and New Mexico, where AMD is also being investigated [10,11]. In Canada, the Ontario region has a high density of small copper deposits, and AMD is present in a vast area [12]. In Spain, the Iberian Pyrite Belt has hundreds of abandoned deposits that release AMD, and remediation by traditional methods has been ineffective, motivating research into new treatments [1].
AMD treatment technologies are classified as active and passive. Passive systems are characterized by low energy and chemical consumption, and low operational control and maintenance requirements, which makes them particularly attractive for remote sites or abandoned mines, and in the closure phase of projects [13,14]. Passive treatments are often designed to pass the AMD through a reactive bed of organic materials, generally residues (e.g., wood chips, manure, compost), and alkaline materials (e.g., limestone, sea shells, ash). These two types of substrate can be used separately as in an anoxic limestone drain (ALD), which uses only alkaline materials; can be mixed in a homogeneous substrate in a biochemical reactor [15]; or arranged sequentially as in a reducing and alkalinity producing system (RAPS) [16]. The alkaline materials react with the acidity of the AMD, causing the increase of pH and the precipitation of metals as hydroxides or carbonates, while the organic material promotes the biological reduction of sulfate, also a proton consuming reaction, while the produced sulfide forms sparingly soluble complexes with most toxic metals.
In biological treatment of AMD, the reactive organic material promotes the development of a microbial consortium that hydrolyzes and ferments complex organic compounds such as celluloses and hemicelluloses to electron donors for sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), e.g., acetic acid, and butyric acid [14,17,18,19]. SRB are essential to AMD treatment [19,20] by using sulfate as the final electron acceptor and reducing it to sulfide. When the acidity of the AMD is excessive, the organic mixture can also be supplemented with alkaline substrates. The design of the passive biological reactors is based on the sulfate reduction rate (0.2–0.3 mol m−3 day−1). Based on this rate, the necessary hydraulic residence time (HRT) can be calculated to reach the desired degree of metal removal [15], with the HRT of biochemical reactors being in the order of days.
The ability of alkaline substrates to neutralize acidity is much higher than that of organic substrates, so predominantly chemical treatment systems such as ALDs are most commonly used to treat AMD passively. However, the capacity of chemical systems to remove sulfate is minimal, and therefore also biological systems are employed. Due to the rapid kinetics of chemical neutralization reactions, purely chemical systems are designed based on HRT in the order of hours (e.g., USEPA [21] recommends 15 hours for ALD systems).
Current research on passive bioreactors has focused on the study of the microbial communities involved [22,23]. Environmental factors (HRT, organic source, pH, metals, sulfates, and sulfides) have a significant impact on the composition of microbial communities, and the study of reactor microorganisms is critical for the selection of phylogenetic groups as inoculum [24]. Despite this, passive bioreactors are considered less robust than chemical systems because the characteristics of AMD are variable, and microbial communities can be particularly affected by low pH and temperatures, and toxic concentrations of metals [25], which has stimulated the development of sulfidogenic diffusion exchange systems (SDES) [6,9,26]. A distinctive characteristic of DES systems are exclusive zones for the flow of water through the bed (e.g., screen tubes or layers of sand), in order to favor the permeability of the bed and the protection of microbial communities within reactive, less permeable layers, from direct contact with the toxic components of the contaminated water. Although the technology is still in development, it has demonstrated the ability to treat concentrated AMD, maintain a diverse microbial community, and sustain hydraulic permeability. Pérez et al. [5] implemented three SDES reactors to treat AMD with high copper concentration (528 mg L-1 Cu) using screen tubes to convey the AMD through the reactive bed, achieving both sulfate and metal removal rates of up to 0.33 mol m−3 day−1 (99% metal removal). High copper accumulation was detected at the bottom of the screen tubes, which opens the possibility to recover commercially valuable materials in passive reactors. Torregrosa et al. [9] also treated concentrated copper AMD (633.5 mg L−1 Cu) with SDES permeable reactive barrier (PRB) bench-scale reactors, attaining metal removal efficiencies of practically 100% at high sulfate removal rates (0.44–0.47 mol m−3 day−1). The study focused on the thickness of SDES PRB layers, showing that the correct layer thickness is critical for the proper functioning of SDES PRBs since an excessively thin layer does not allow the establishment of bioprotecting gradients, while an excessively thick one causes diffusion to control the treatment efficiency.
On the other hand, the dispersed alkaline system (DAS) is an important development in terms of passive technologies for AMD chemical treatment [27,28,29,30]. The DAS consists of a matrix of wood chips mixed with adhered fine particles of limestone to increase the reactivity of the limestone and reduce the problems of passivation and clogging [29]. Wood particles provide high permeability and large pores to reduce clogging problems, while the small grain size of the limestone provides a large reactive area to increase reactivity and decrease passivation. Rötting et al. [31] treated highly acidic AMD (1350–2300 mg L−1 as CaCO3) in column DAS reactors, removing almost all metals and 900–1600 mg L−1 as CaCO3 acidity, more than three times what a conventional passive system achieves (e.g., 300 mg L−1 alkalinity as CaCO3 in ALDs). Another DAS was implemented in the field, a variant that uses MgO instead of limestone, designed to remove divalent metals [32]. The MgO-DAS removed all acidity (1404–1609 mg L−1 CaCO3) and almost all toxic metals. However, at high influent loadings of metals, a hardpan forms that can clog reactors even in a DAS system [29], which suggests evaluating the application of diffusive exchange technology in chemical reactors; for example, by incorporating screen tubes to ensure the uninterrupted transport of AMD through beds of alkaline substrates. This novel technology, alkaline diffusive exchange system (ADES), was evaluated for the first time in this research, with limestone sand (1 mm < d < 4.75 mm) as the reactive substrate.
Although there have been remarkable advances in the development of new passive technologies, comparative studies that evaluate them under similar conditions are lacking. Accordingly, the objective of this study was to evaluate three emerging passive technologies, SDES, DAS, and ADES, in the treatment of concentrated AMD from copper mining. We fed all reactors with the same synthetic AMD, periodically monitoring critical effluent parameters to establish objective comparisons. The reacted substrates were investigated to establish metal mass balances and confirm the processes that occurred during the experiment.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Reactor Set Up and Operation

Four prototypes (called reactors A, B, C, and D) (Figure 1), made of PVC columns, 1.5 meters high and 20 cm outside diameter, were implemented in a roofed outdoor enclosure. All had in common a 20 cm layer of coarse sand (0.5–5 mm grain size) at the base, a 100 cm reactive substrate bed, a 10 cm layer of coarse sand (0.5–5 mm grain size) on top, and a 10 cm zone of free water. Three of these prototypes (reactors A, B, and D) worked with DES technology, including a metal screen tube attached to their bases, of 6 cm internal diameter. The fourth prototype corresponded to a DAS reactor (reactor C). Of the three DES prototypes, two were SDES replicas (reactors A and B), while the other was an ADES (reactor D). Chemical reactors C and D were equipped with five sampling ports at 10, 20, 40, 60, and 90 cm distance from the entrance of the flow, above the first layer of sand (Figure 1b).
The reactive bed volume of DES A, B, and C reactors was 26 liters. The reactive material weight distribution (wet weight) of SDES A and B reactors was 13% fresh cow manure, 23% leaf compost, 37% fibers of non-delignified cellulose, and 26% powdered limestone (Table 1). The inoculum of the SDES reactors consisted of 8 L anaerobic digester content of the local sewage treatment plant. On the other hand, the ADES D chemical reactor was filled with a mixture of limestone sand (1–4.75 mm) (54% w/w) and coarse sand (1–4.75 mm) (46% w/w). The reactive bed volume of the DAS (reactor C) was 29.3 L. The DAS reactor was filled with a mixture of wood chips (average thickness and length of 0.7 mm and 31.6 mm, respectively), and fine limestone (D30 = 0.078 mm, D50 = 0.19 mm, D60 = 0.244 mm) in a proportion of 12% and 88% by weight, respectively.
After filling, SDES reactors A and B were left in batch (phase 1) with an acid solution of Na2SO4 (2574 mg L−1 SO4, pH 3.3) for 40 days (days 1–40) until evidence of sulfate reduction was detected. Subsequently, these two reactors were fed the same sulfate-bearing solution at a flow rate of 0.69 L day−1 (phase 2) during 38 days (days 41–78). Then (phase 3), all prototypes operated for the following 215 days (days 79–293) with synthetic AMD (601 mg L−1 Cu, 96 mg L−1 Al, 61 mg L−1 Zn, 153 mg L−1 Mn, 164 mg L−1 Ca, 7 mg L−1 Fe(II), 2,533 mg L−1 SO4, and pH 2.8–3.1) at the same flow rate of phase 2. The AMD, characteristic of large copper mines in Chile [8], was prepared weekly using metal sulfates, and the pH adjusted with HCl. The HRT for the four reactors was 21 days assuming a substrate porosity of 50%. This residence time was defined to achieve a high metal removal in the SDES reactors. Although oversized for chemical reactors, the unique HRT resulted in the same metal load for all reactors, allowing subsequently to perform a comparative analysis of the effect and fate of these metals. The flow was ascending to minimize the overflow of the reactor by clogging, by a peristaltic pump, Masterflex 7523-90, Cole Parmer, Vernon Hills, USA, and run using Masterflex tubing.

2.2. Water Sampling and Analysis

During phases 1 and 2, column effluent samples were collected weekly to determine pH, ORP, and concentrations of dissolved SO42− (Sulfaver, HACH, Loveland, USA. Method 4500 E, APHA [33]) and total sulfide (Methylene blue, HACH, Loveland, USA. Method 4500-S2−D, APHA [33]). The samples were filtered (0.45 μm) immediately after sampling to measure pH and ORP (Orion 370 pH/mV meter, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, USA). The pH electrode (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, USA) was calibrated using standard pH 4.0, pH 7.0, and pH 12.0 buffers, and the ORP electrode (Ag/AgCl reference, Thermo Fischer Scientific, Waltham, USA) was checked using Zobell’s solution. Samples of both influent and effluent were taken weekly (days 1–209), and then they were taken every two weeks (days 210–293). During the experiments with AMD (phase 3), metals (Cu, Zn, Fe, Ca and Al) were also measured in filtered samples of influent, effluent and intermediate ports (reactors C and D) by atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS; Analyst 400, Perkin Elmer, Waltham, USA). Intermediate ports of reactors C and D were sampled every two weeks from day 132 to 293 and from day 210 to 293, respectively. Likewise, samples of pore water were also extracted from the reactive material from reactors A and B to a depth of 40 cm at the end of the experiment, inserting from the surface a 3 mm diameter stainless steel tube connected to a syringe.

2.3. Solids Sampling and Mineralogy

The metal content and the mineralogy of the precipitates associated with the spent substrate and those sedimented to the bottom of the screen tubes were analyzed. Peristaltic pumps were used to extract sedimented precipitates. For the extraction of substrate samples, the reactors were opened longitudinally, and a minimum of 5 heights coinciding with the liquid sampling points sampled. Additionally, to observe the effect of DES on horizontal variability, samples were taken at different distances from the screen (0–1.5, 1.5–3.5, 3.5–6.5 cm). In the case of C and D reactors, samples were also taken at additional heights, with more precision in the first 10 cm of the substrate where steep chemical gradients were expected to form. As the substrates in the mixtures were heterogeneous, samples were homogenized by quartering. In an area of 10 by 10 cm, samples were divided into 4, and opposite sectors eliminated, repeating the process until obtaining 2 g of sample. Reactor C sample components, wood chips and limestone, required manual separation first.
The samples of reactive material and sediments were dried at 60 °C (binder) to constant mass. Then, 1 g of the dry sample was ground and digested for 24 h at 60 °C (C-MAG HS7, IKA) with nitric acid at 65% (Suprapur, Merck, Darmstadt, Germany). The temperature was increased to 120 °C for 1 h, and then kept at 180 °C until a concentrate of approximately 5 mL was obtained, which was allowed to cool to ± 60 °C, and then digestions were carried out with perchloric acid at 70% (Suprapur, Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) for 30 min at 220 °C. The residuum was cooled to ambient temperature and diluted to 100 mL with deionized water to determine the Cu, Zn, Ca, and Al concentrations with AAS (AAnalyst 400, Perkin Elmer, Waltham, USA). Additionally, different samples were analyzed using an X-ray diffractometer (XRD) model D4 ENDEAVOR, Bruker, Madison, USA, with copper radiation to identify the presence of crystalline minerals.

2.4. Microbiological and Molecular Analysis

Samples of the effluents of biological bioreactors SDES (A and B) were collected periodically to count viable anaerobic microorganisms. The samples were serially diluted and spread onto MV solid medium (DSMZ 641, DSMZ-German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures GmbH, Braunschweig, Germany) and incubated in an anaerobic atmosphere (using the Anaerogen™ system, Oxoid, Basingstoke, UK) at 30 °C for four weeks to determine the colony-forming units (CFU). Individual colonies were then subcultured repetitively on fresh solid medium, to confirm the identities of the isolates obtained. Next, individual colonies from each pure culture were resuspended in a basal medium of salts to extract DNA (typically 1 μL) for the amplification of the 16S rRNA gene [34] using the primer pairs 27F [35] and 1492R [36]. The PCR products were sequenced (Macrogen, Inc., Seoul, Korea) and aligned using the BLASTN online software (NCBI) and compared with the GenBank database [37].

3. Results

3.1. Effluent Hydrochemistry

3.1.1. Sulfate Removal

The biochemical reactors achieved high sulfate removals (Figure 2a,b). During phase 2 of continuous sulfated solution feeding, the sulfate reduction rates averaged 0.25 and 0.37 mol m−3 day−1 for SDES A and B reactors, respectively. Later, during stage 3 of AMD feeding, they averaged 0.27 and 0.29 mol m−3 day−1. Therefore, the DES system provided a significant degree of protection to microorganisms since the reduction rates were not significantly affected once the AMD feeding began. However, during the last three months of stage 3, the sulfate reduction rates decreased to 0.17 and 0.21 mol m−3 day−1 (Figure 2b), perhaps due to the depletion of the more bioavailable organic matter. On the other hand, the DAS reactor only removed 0.061 moles SO4 m−3 d−1, and the ADES reactor, 0.059 moles SO4 m−3 d−1, due to the high solubility of sulfate salts. The only significant sulfate removal reaction in chemical reactors is gypsum precipitation, in association with limestone grains [4,31].

3.1.2. Chemical and Biological Process Indicators (ORP, pH, Sulfide, Calcium)

During the acclimatization process (phase 1) and the continuous feeding of sulfate-bearing solution (phase 2), sulfide was the main indicator of biological activity (Figure 2c), while during the rest of the experiment its levels were close to zero, indicating the precipitation of metallic sulfides (phase 3) and an excess metal to sulfide ratio. On the other hand, effluent calcium (Figure 2d) in chemical reactors accounted for the reactions of limestone dissolution and gypsum precipitation.
Effluent pH (Figure 2e) of SDES reactors stabilized between 4.5 and 5.5 during AMD feeding. Preferential flow paths due to initial differential substrate compaction may explain the small differences between biological prototypes. Instead, effluent pH in DAS and ADES reactors ranged from 6.5 to 7, as a result of increased buffering by calcite solids.
The redox potential (ORP) is a measure of how reducing or oxidizing an environment is. Free sulfide in SDES prototypes A and B, during phases 1 and 2, reduced the ORP to < −200 mV (Figure 2f), optimal for biological sulfate reduction [6]. However, the reaction of sulfide with metals (Cu, Zn, and Fe) during AMD feeding resulted in positive ORP values and an oxidizing environment. Notwithstanding, substrate ORP remained negative and pH values were higher, as measurements at a depth of 40 cm at the end of the experiment showed (−200 mV< ORP< −60 mV; 5.8 < pH < 7.6). Finally, in the chemical reactors, ORP values remained always in the positive range, due to the absence of a reducing agent.

3.1.3. Metal Removal

Figure 3 shows effluent metal concentrations during AMD feeding and Table 2 individual and total metal removal rates and efficiencies. Average metal removal rates in reactors A and B reached 326.6 and 310.8 mmol m−3 day−1, respectively, values considered normal for biochemical reactors [5]. Nevertheless, metal removal was only partial because the metal load was higher than generated sulfide (evidenced by the low levels of effluent sulfide). Notably, low Zn and Mn removals are explained by the high solubility product of ZnS (10−24.7) compared to CuS (10−36.1), while Mn does not form MnS solids (Figure 3 and Table 2). Instead, the chemical reactors achieved close to 100% metal removal, less for Mn, because even chemical calcite-based passive reactors do not generate sufficiently high pH values required for adequate Mn precipitation [32,38].

3.2. Reactor Hydrochemical Profiles (DAS and ADES Only)

Figure 4 shows a sequence of hydrochemical profiles within chemical reactors, based on measurements in samples at intermediate ports. The pH behavior within reactors (Figure 4a,f) was uniform over most of the substrate, with the highest pH increase constrained to the first 20 cm in the DAS, and to the first 10 cm in the ADES. Slower calcite dissolution kinetics due to passivation may explain the slower pH increase rate in the DAS.
The dynamics of the dissolved Ca profile evolution inside the reactors were complex. Dissolved Ca in the DAS had the expected behavior by decreasing initially, consistent with limestone depletion [29], while the more constant dissolved Ca profiles in the ADES (Figure 4i) could be due to reduced passivation or to diffusion-limited lateral transport, as reaction products such as Ca2+ must diffuse laterally to the central screen before being removed by advective flow. Similar behavior was not observed in the pH profiles (Figure 4f), perhaps due to the higher diffusivity of the H+ ion. Also, both reactors maintained an effluent Ca concentration in a narrow range of 600–650 mg L−1, perhaps conditioned by a solubility limit.
Similar behavior of Cu, Zn and Mn were observed between reactors. Cu also slowed down Zn removal in the chemical reactors as Cu was removed first (Figure 4b,g) and Zn, mainly between 40 to 60 cm (Figure 4c,h). Again, Mn breakthrough was fast in both reactors (Figure 4e,j). Finally, lower initial Cu and Zn concentrations within the ADES can also be explained by lateral diffusion-controlled transport.

3.3. Metal Accumulation in Reactors

Figure 5 shows the distribution of concentrations of Ca, Cu, Al, and Zn in the reactive bed of the reactors at the end of the experiment. In the biochemical reactors, the layer surrounding the screen (0–1.5 cm) presented the highest concentrations of Cu, Al, and Zn. Also, metal concentrations were highest in the first 0–10 cm zone of the columns, showing a diminishing trend toward the final zone, similar to what was observed in chemical reactors. Notably, the reactive area in contact with the central screen acquired a black-blue color, which is interpreted as due to sulfur-containing metals generated from the activity of SRB, such as copper or iron sulfide [18]. As explained by the diffusive exchange model [26], the precipitates accumulate inside the reactor near the interface between the reactive and conductive zones where cross-sectional fluxes of metals and biogenic sulfide meet.
The areas with the highest dissolution of CaCO3 and, therefore, with the lowest presence of Ca in the solid phase coincided with those with the highest accumulation of AMD metals. Thus, the reaction of AMD with calcite was also a significant mechanism of metal immobilization in biochemical reactors. SDES reactors did not experiment clogging, in contrast to conventional biochemical reactors that are vulnerable to permeability losses due to the accumulation of metallic precipitates and organic growth in the pores, especially for operations at high HRT [14].
In chemical reactors C (DAS) and D (ADES), no copper was detected in the effluent, and the influent copper was accounted for by precipitated copper on the substrate, mostly in the first 0–10 cm layer (Figure 5c,d). In the DAS, a thick cemented shell (hardpan) formed, capable of clogging the reactor (Figure 6). The shell was formed mainly by calcite, wood chips and blue-turquoise precipitates characteristic of carbonates, hydroxides and copper sulfates. Rötting et al. [31] confirmed that aluminum was responsible for clogging in their DAS reactors and that gypsum was responsible for passivating the surface of the calcite grains. Here, there was also evidence of passivation due to the only partial dissolution of calcite, reaching a maximum of 69% in the first centimeter of the DAS substrate (Figure 5c). Unlike the DAS, the first layer of substrate in the ADES was only partially cemented by precipitates (Figure 7), and because of the screen, clogging was not an issue. Broader internal distribution of Cu precipitates was evidenced, forming near the interface between the conductive and reactive zones. Armoring may have also occurred in the ADES as the maximum Ca dissolution detected was 73%.
The chemical reactors concentrated the precipitation reactions in a thin bottom cross-section resulting in a local permeability loss that critically impaired reactor hydraulics of the DAS. Because the reactors were operated in upward flow mode, the clogged layer formed at the bottom and could not be removed to restore substrate permeability. Similarly, a calcite-DAS tested at pilot field-scale formed a hardpan of Al-rich precipitates causing clogging or loss of permeability [29], however, the reactor flow was downward and precipitation took place in the uppermost layer. The permeability was restored by excavating the top 10 cm of substrate. Periodic harvesting of the hardpan could also facilitate valuable metal recovery. On the other hand, considering that precipitates in biochemical reactors accumulated in the layer surrounding the screen, their periodic removal would be impracticable and metal recovery would have to be evaluated during decommissioning.
A detailed study of the fate of Cu in the reactors was carried out (Figure 8), due to the high concentration of Cu in the AMD and its potential effect on the reactors’ clogging and passivation, as well as to the importance of recovering it. The SDES reactors (A and B) behaved similarly, receiving in average 91.4 ± 0.6 g Cu, of which 49% ± 0.4% deposited in the reactive substrate, 15.1% ± 3.4% left dissolved and 5.5% ± 0.5% particulate in the effluent, and 5.2% ± 0.7% accumulated in the bottom sediment of the screen (25.5% ± 3.5% was unaccounted for). In the case of DAS and ADES rectors, estimated recovered Cu in the substrate (114.9 g and 92.4 g Cu, respectively) was more than influent Cu, giving mass balance errors of 28% and 2%, respectively. Correspondingly, total effluent Cu of 0 and 0.3 g was negligible. Also, only 0.4 g Cu was recovered from the bottom of the ADES screen. Reducing the mass balance error of the order of 25% in SDES reactors would require increasing the transverse sampling resolution, considering the sharp metal gradients that are expected to form [26]. Additionally, the 30% DAS mass balance error, might be due to the presence of preferential flows in this type of reactors [38], increasing spatial variability.

3.4. Post-Treatment Mineralogy (XRD)

Figure 9 presents the X-ray diffractograms of the reactive substrate samples. The identification of minerals depends on the crystallization they achieved. The absence of minerals due to poor crystallinity in XRD readings is recorded in several studies [39,40]. The XRD peaks of the SDES reactors corresponded mainly to Covellite (CuS) and Wurtzite (ZnS) minerals. For the DAS and ADES reactors, Malachite signals (Cu2CO3(OH)2) were observed, without finding any other copper mineral. No zinc or aluminum minerals were recorded either. Similarly, Gibert et al. [39] recorded the presence of malachite inside batch reactors composed of calcite with similar pH and fed with copper, but unlike our records, they found paratacamite (Cu2(OH)3Cl). Finally, in all the reactors peaks corresponding to the minerals calcite (CaCO3) and gypsum (CaSO4∙H2O) were observed, the first present in the substrate mixture, and the second, formed by supersaturation due to the supply of influent sulfate, and the release of Ca by calcite dissolution.

3.5. Microbiological Changes in the Bioreactors

3.5.1. Evolution of CFU Counts

The SDES bioreactors showed a progressive tendency to decrease CFU, during the continuous operation with AMD feed (Figure 10), particularly during days 30 and 215, probably as a consequence of the concentrations of Cu and Zn present in the bioreactors, above the inhibitory levels for the SRB (4 and 13 mg L−1 respectively; Kaksonen and Puhakka [41]). Besides, Utgikar et al. [42] determined that metal sulfide precipitates are also potentially inhibitory to SRBs. The same toxic effect has been recently reported by Torregrosa et al. [9] using passive bench-scale reactors with diffusive exchange systems, where the mechanism of bioprotection with different reactive layer thicknesses was studied. However, it should be noted that the CFU determined in this study are correlated with the number of cells present in the effluent, therefore this trend might not represent the predominant activity in the reactive material packed in the columns. Furthermore, the diffusive exchange bioreactors are also characterized by an area of low hydraulic conductivity, where the sulfidogenic consortiums grow efficiently by minimizing the contact with the soluble metal in the screen.

3.5.2. Identification of Bacterial Isolates

Four isolates were obtained during the operation with synthetic AMD feeding (Table 3). One of these isolates (UDEC_USS ASMT5 isolate) was confirmed to belong to the SRB group, responsible for the production of sulfides in the bioreactors, while the other three isolates did not present evidence of sulfidogenesis. The first isolate and the predominant culturable bacteria in effluent samples (between 55–70%; data not shown) corresponded to the neutrophilic sulfate-reducing species Desulfovibrio marrakechensis, which has been reported in other sulfidogenic reactors for the treatment of AMD [43,44,45]. The second isolate was a facultative anaerobic species of the genus Streptococcus, which has been reported within the microbial diversity present in an anaerobic sulfate-reducing bioreactor [46]. The third isolate was the species Brevundimonas mediterranea which is characterized by using cellobiose, a disaccharide that is generated from the hydrolysis of cellulose, acting as an intermediary in the hydrolytic stage of anaerobic digestion [47]. The fourth isolate belongs to the phylum Bacteroidetes encompassing a large number of Gram-negative and anaerobic bacteria with a wide distribution in the environment, including soil, sediments, seawater and the digestive tract of animals. This phylum includes species of the genus Bacteroides [48] that have been identified in other sulfidogenic reactors for the treatment of AMD [6,24,45,49]. Additionally, species of the genus Bacteroides have been reported with the ability to degrade the cellulolytic material [50] and to act as intermediaries in the hydrolysis stage, in anaerobic digestion [47].
The biodiversity obtained during the experiment can be explained by the complex microbial relationship that must exist to degrade insoluble organic complexes to low molecular weight soluble ones such as lactate and organic acids, sources of carbon and electrons bioavailable for SRBs. Also, the existing microbial diversity is favored by the configuration of the bioreactors that prevents the microorganisms from coming into direct contact with the AMD. This protection favors a greater bacterial diversity and, consequently, a higher production of sulfide [6,9] increasing the resilience of the reactor to toxic metal stress, temperature, acidity and exposure to oxygen present in AMD [51].

4. Conclusions

  • The DES technology showed a good performance in the chemical and biological treatment of AMD, eliminating clogging problems, contributing to increasing the useful life of the ADES reactor, and controlling the harmful effects of metals, favoring the establishment of a diverse community of microorganisms in the SDES reactors.
  • Due to the high reactivity of its substrate, the DAS reactor accumulated the metals in a lower reactor volume, allowing to conclude that it requires the lowest HRT and smallest substrate volume among all reactor types.
  • A side effect of this concentration of precipitates in the DAS, however, was the creation of a hardpan layer that caused a significant loss of hydraulic conductivity. Periodic harvesting (removal) of the hardpan could facilitate metal recovery and restore substrate permeability.
  • The study indicates that the limitations of each treatment could be overcome by combining their strengths in a combined or serial treatment, such as introducing screen tubes in DAS reactors to overcome clogging problems.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, A.S.; formal analysis, I.N., P.S. and M.T.; funding acquisition, A.S.; investigation, M.A.G., D.M. and M.T.; methodology, A.S., P.S. and M.A.; project administration, A.S. and P.S.; resources, I.N., T.R., and G.S.; supervision, A.S.; writing—original draft, A.S., I.N., M.A.G., D.M., P.S. and M.T.; writing—review and editing, I.N., T.R., G.S. and M.A. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by CONICYT, grant numbers FONDECYT 1140451 and FONDECYT 11150170.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Design of passive reactor prototypes: (a) sulfidogenic diffusion exchange systems (SDES) replicas without sampling ports and with metal screens (reactors A and B); (b) The dispersed alkaline system (DAS) with sampling ports and without a metal screen (reactor C); (c) The alkaline diffusive exchange system (ADES) with sampling ports and a metal screen (reactor D).
Figure 1. Design of passive reactor prototypes: (a) sulfidogenic diffusion exchange systems (SDES) replicas without sampling ports and with metal screens (reactors A and B); (b) The dispersed alkaline system (DAS) with sampling ports and without a metal screen (reactor C); (c) The alkaline diffusive exchange system (ADES) with sampling ports and a metal screen (reactor D).
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Figure 2. Evolution of critical variables during the experiment: (a) effluent sulfate; (b) sulfate removal rate; (c) effluent sulfide; (d) effluent calcium; (e) effluent pH; (f) effluent ORP (EAg/AgCl).
Figure 2. Evolution of critical variables during the experiment: (a) effluent sulfate; (b) sulfate removal rate; (c) effluent sulfide; (d) effluent calcium; (e) effluent pH; (f) effluent ORP (EAg/AgCl).
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Figure 3. Metal concentrations: (a) Cu; (b) Al; (c) Zn; (d) Mn.
Figure 3. Metal concentrations: (a) Cu; (b) Al; (c) Zn; (d) Mn.
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Figure 4. Metal concentration (Cu, Zn, Ca and Mn) profiles for C-DAS (ae) and D-ADES (fj) reactors.
Figure 4. Metal concentration (Cu, Zn, Ca and Mn) profiles for C-DAS (ae) and D-ADES (fj) reactors.
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Figure 5. Chemical composition of the solid samples versus height in reactors: (a) A-SDES; (b) B-SDES; (c) C-DAS; (d) D-ADES. In DES reactors (A, B, and C) “i” stands for the inner annular section (0–1.5 cm) next to the screen, “m” for the middle annular section (1.5–3.5 cm), and “e” for the outer or exterior annular section (3.5–6.5 cm).
Figure 5. Chemical composition of the solid samples versus height in reactors: (a) A-SDES; (b) B-SDES; (c) C-DAS; (d) D-ADES. In DES reactors (A, B, and C) “i” stands for the inner annular section (0–1.5 cm) next to the screen, “m” for the middle annular section (1.5–3.5 cm), and “e” for the outer or exterior annular section (3.5–6.5 cm).
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Figure 6. Formed in the DAS reactor: (a) front view; (b) side view.
Figure 6. Formed in the DAS reactor: (a) front view; (b) side view.
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Figure 7. The ADES reactive substrate near the screen: (a) colors of the precipitates; (b) partial armoring.
Figure 7. The ADES reactive substrate near the screen: (a) colors of the precipitates; (b) partial armoring.
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Figure 8. Fate of Cu in reactors: (a) A-SDES; (b) B-SDES; (c) C-DAS; (d) D-ADES.
Figure 8. Fate of Cu in reactors: (a) A-SDES; (b) B-SDES; (c) C-DAS; (d) D-ADES.
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Figure 9. Diffractograms of precipitates sampled from the inside of reactors: (a) A-SDES; (b) B-SDES; (c) C-DAS; (d) D-ADES.
Figure 9. Diffractograms of precipitates sampled from the inside of reactors: (a) A-SDES; (b) B-SDES; (c) C-DAS; (d) D-ADES.
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Figure 10. Monitoring of the anaerobic microbial population in SDES biological bioreactors (A and B) operated in continuous flow mode with AMD feeding.
Figure 10. Monitoring of the anaerobic microbial population in SDES biological bioreactors (A and B) operated in continuous flow mode with AMD feeding.
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Table 1. Prototype reactive mixture composition 1.
Table 1. Prototype reactive mixture composition 1.
SubstrateReactor A (SDES)Reactor B (SDES)Reactor C (DAS)Reactor D (ADES)
Fibers of forest origin4.48 kg4.05 kg--
Leaf compost2.84 kg2.57 kg--
Cow manure1.63 kg1.48 kg--
Pulverized calcite3.15 kg2.85 kg14.9 kg-
Bacterial inoculum 8.17 L7.38 L--
Calcite sand (1–4.75 mm)---20.05 kg
Wood chips--1.95 kg-
Coarse sand (1–4.75 mm)---17.38 kg
1 Wet weight.
Table 2. Metal removal.
Table 2. Metal removal.
ReactorCuAlZnMnTotal
Rates (mmol m−3 day−1)
SDES A213.3 ± 40.776.7 ± 32.814.1 ± 5.022.5 ± 11.4326.6 ± 35.3
SDES B197.1 ± 24.279.9 ± 26.512.8 ± 5.121.0 ± 7.9310.8 ± 22.9
DAS C221.2 ± 19.888.1 ± 30.321.0 ± 3.048.3 ± 24.6378.6 ± 21.9
ADES D245.9 ± 19.297.2 ± 32.223.3 ± 3.455.0 ± 17.0421.4 ± 21.0
Total removed (moles) and efficiencies (in parenthesis)
SDES A1.26 (87%)0.47 (80%)0.09 (66%)0.19 (45%)2.02 (80%)
SDES B1.18 (82%)0.47 (82%)0.08 (60%)0.18 (41%)1.91 (77%)
DAS C1.41 (100%)0.57 (99%)0.14 (98%)0.31 (73%)2.42 (95%)
ADES D1.43 (100%)0.57 (99%)0.14 (98%)0.32 (76%)2.46 (96%)
Table 3. Some physiological and phylogenetic characteristics of the bacteria isolated during the operation of both bioreactors.
Table 3. Some physiological and phylogenetic characteristics of the bacteria isolated during the operation of both bioreactors.
IsolateMain Physiological CharacteristicsAmplified Product Length (nt) (16S rRNA gene)Closest RelativeSimilarity (%)GenBank Accession Number
UDEC_USS ASMT5 16SStrictly anaerobic, non-motile and
Gram-negative [52]
1384Desulfovibrio marrakechensis strain EMSSDQ4 [52]99MK225576
UDEC_USS ASMT6 16SGram-positive, nonspore-forming and facultative anaerobe [53]1363Streptococcus sanguinis strain: JCM 5708 99MK226162
UDEC_USS ASMT7 16SGram-negative, rod-shaped, non-spore-forming [54]1302Brevundimonas mediterranea strain V4.BO [54]99MK226198
UDEC_USS ASMT8 16SGram-negative [48]1361Bacteroidetes bacterium94MK228862

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Schwarz, A.; Nancucheo, I.; Gaete, M.A.; Muñoz, D.; Sanhueza, P.; Torregrosa, M.; Rötting, T.; Southam, G.; Aybar, M. Evaluation of Dispersed Alkaline Substrate and Diffusive Exchange System Technologies for the Passive Treatment of Copper Mining Acid Drainage. Water 2020, 12, 854. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12030854

AMA Style

Schwarz A, Nancucheo I, Gaete MA, Muñoz D, Sanhueza P, Torregrosa M, Rötting T, Southam G, Aybar M. Evaluation of Dispersed Alkaline Substrate and Diffusive Exchange System Technologies for the Passive Treatment of Copper Mining Acid Drainage. Water. 2020; 12(3):854. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12030854

Chicago/Turabian Style

Schwarz, Alex, Iván Nancucheo, Maria A. Gaete, Diego Muñoz, Pamela Sanhueza, Martin Torregrosa, Tobias Rötting, Gordon Southam, and Marcelo Aybar. 2020. "Evaluation of Dispersed Alkaline Substrate and Diffusive Exchange System Technologies for the Passive Treatment of Copper Mining Acid Drainage" Water 12, no. 3: 854. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12030854

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