Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.49, No.6, 698-701, 1998
Evaluation of the efficiency of measures for sulphidic mine waste mitigation
To control the environmentally detrimental impact of acid rock drainage, two different countermeasures, layers of acid-buffering materials and sodium dodecyl sulphate addition, were tested for their efficiency in laboratory percolation experiments. In the experiment with a layer of calcium bentonite, only the iron output was reduced. The experiments with layers of concrete grains demonstrated a decrease of the microbial activity as well as a precipitation of heavy-metal ions, whereas the cell numbers did not decrease. Furthermore, finely grained concrete (1-5 mm) formed a water-tight hard-pan (self-sealing layer). In the experiment with 1 mM sodium dodecyl sulphate, all the microorganisms were killed and hence metal sulphide dissolution was stopped. With 0.1 mM sodium dodecyl sulphate only a short, transient inhibition of leaching was achieved. The bacteria remained alive.
Keywords:MICROBIAL DIVERSITY