Use of ochre from an abandoned metal mine in the south east of ireland for phosphorus sequestration from dairy dirty water
Fenton, O. ; Healy, M.G. ; Rodgers, M.
Fenton, O.
Healy, M.G.
Rodgers, M.
Citation
Fenton, O. Healy, M.G.; Rodgers, M. (2009). Use of ochre from an abandoned metal mine in the south east of ireland for phosphorus sequestration from dairy dirty water. Journal of Environment Quality 38 (3), 1120-1125
Abstract
Ochre found at coal mine drainage sites in the United Kingdom shows a high phosphorus (P) retention capacity with little mobilization of metals. This indicates that ochre has the potential to adsorb P from agricultural wastewaters for possible use as a fertilizer. Little research has focused on the ability of metal mine ochre to sequester P in an environmentally sustainable way. Untreated acid mine drainage from an abandoned copper-sulfur mine in the Avoca-Avonmore catchment in the south east of Ireland results in extensive low-value ochre deposition. In this study, P-amended water (50 mL) was mixed with this ochre (2.5 g) in batch experiments, and a maximum P adsorption capacity, calculated from the Langmuir equation, of between 16 and 21 g P kg(-1) was calculated. However, mobilization of heavy metals from Avoca ochre in distilled, surface, and dirty water batch experiments was observed. This mobilization may inhibit ochre's use in P removal from wastewaters.
Funder
Publisher
American Society of Agronomy
Publisher DOI
10.2134/jeq2008.0227
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland