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Gras, Antoine

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Gras

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Antoine

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Université Laval. Département de géologie et de génie géologique

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ncf13704710

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  • PublicationRestreint
    Isotopic evidence of passive mineral carbonation in mine wastes from the Dumont Nickel Project (Abitibi, Quebec)
    (Elsevier, 2017-03-17) Beaudoin, Georges; Dupont, Pierre; Gras, Antoine; Bussière, Bruno; Lemieux, Jean-Michel; Plante, Benoît; Molson, John W. H.
    Natural weathering of ultramafic rocks in mine tailings captures atmospheric CO2 through the formation of magnesium carbonates. The Dumont Nickel Project (DNP) is of particular interest as it will generate 1.7 Gt of ultramafic residues. A field experiment has been conducted at the DNP site in order to understand the process of natural CO2 sequestration. Two experimental cells were built using waste rock and mineral processing tailings and were instrumented with gas sampling ports and probes to monitor water saturation and suction. A decrease of the interstitial gas-phase CO2 concentration in both cells, from atmospheric values (∼390 ppmv) near the surface to ∼100 ppmv near the bottom, reflects active CO2 consumption by the residues. The total carbon content of the weathered DNP mine waste ranges from 0.2 wt% to 6.5 wt% C. Hydrotalcites supergroup minerals (pyroaurite-3R, brugnatellite, pyroaurite 2-H), aragonite, nesquehonite, dypingite and hydromagnesite were absent from the unweathered residues and precipitated in the cells during passive mineral carbonation. In situ measurements using Wavelength-Scanned Cavity Ring Down Spectroscopy reveal an increase of δ13C(air) from −8‰ near the surface of the cells to ∼2‰ near the bottom that is correlated with the decrease in CO2 concentration. This trend is explained by kinetic carbon isotope fractionation during dissolution of atmospheric CO2 in interstitial water (ΔDIC-CO2 = −11.2‰). Secondary carbonates, precipitated from the interstitial water, are characterized by a moderately high δ18O and low δ13C. These isotopic compositions of the carbonates are consistent with precipitation in an evaporative environment where the kinetic carbon fractionation during atmospheric CO2 dissolution produces interstitial water depleted in 13C. Moreover, isotopic compositions of hydrotalcite supergroup minerals and other carbonate minerals are consistent with modern precipitation from the weathering of mining residue. These observations demonstrate the atmospheric source for the sequestered CO2 and help constrain a conceptual model of the carbonation reaction in the residues.
  • PublicationAccès libre
    Atmospheric carbon sequestration in ultramafic mining residues and impacts on leachate water chemistry at the Dumont Nickel Project, Quebec, Canada
    (Elsevier, 2020-05-11) Beaudoin, Georges; Gras, Antoine; Plante, Benoît; Molson, John W. H.
    Passive carbon mineralization in ultramafic mining residues, which allows the sequestration of CO2 through carbonate precipitation, is one of the options being considered to limit the accumulation of anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere. The Dumont Nickel Project (DNP) will generate approximately 1.7 Gt of utramafic mining residues over 33 years of production and the mine will release about 127,700 tonnes of CO2 each year. Using two experimental cells filled with ultramafic waste rock (EC-1) and milling residues (EC-2), the impacts of carbon mineralization on leachate water quality were studied and the quantity of sequestered carbon was estimated.Hydrotalcite supergroup minerals, aragonite, artinite, nesquehonite, dypingite and hydromagnesite precipitated through atmospheric weathering, while the inorganic carbon content of the weathered mining waste increased from 0.1 wt% to 4.0 wt% which indicate active CO2 sequestration. The leachate water, sampled at the bottom of the experimental cells, is characterized by an alkaline pH (~9.5), a high alkalinity (~90 to ~750 mg/L) and a high concentration of magnesium (~50 - ~750 mg/L), which is typical from weathering of ultramafic rocks in a system open to CO2. Since 2012, the chemical composition of the leachate water has evolved seasonally. These seasonal variations are best explained by: (1) climatic variations over the year and, (2) increased carbonate precipitation between May and July. Increased carbonate precipitation decreased the alkalinity and magnesium concentrations in the leachate water and produced pore waters which were undersaturated with respect to carbonate minerals such as artinite and hydromagnesite. *Revised manuscript with no changes marked Click here to view linked References Carbonate precipitation thus self-limits carbon sequestration through a negative feed-back loop. The carbon sequestration potential of the DNP residues is also influenced by the hydrogeological properties of the residues. In cell EC-2, a high liquid/solid ratio, which limits carbonate precipitation, was maintained by the hydrogeological properties. Since 2011, an estimate of 13 kg of atmospheric CO2 has been sequestered in the milling residues (EC-2), which corresponds to a mean rate of 1.4 (+/- 0.3) kgCO2/tonne/year. Using this mean rate, the 15 Mt of tailings produced each year, during the planned 33 years of mining operation, could potentially sequester 21,000 tonne of CO2 per year by passive carbon mineralization, about 16% of the 127,700 tonnes of CO2 annually emitted by the planned mining operation.