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The study examines the drying and wetting cycles of tailings dams (TDs) and their impact on physical, mechanical and hydraulic properties. TDs are divided in four zones: the dike, the discharge zone, the transition zone and the distal zone (also known as the decantation pond). The filling process of the tailings dam involves five phases: 1) dumping and wetting, (2) segregation, (3) sedimentation, (4) consolidation, and (5) drying. The occurrence of drying and wetting cycles depends on the water balance, which can be expressed as Inflow = Outflow ± Storage Coefficient.  These cycles are influenced by factors such as changes in the discharge point within TD dike and reservoir, weather conditions, and other external factors. The analysis of drying and wetting cycles in TDs reveals several trends: (a) grain size, density, internal friction angle, and permeability decrease from the discharge zone toward the decantation pond and (b) porosity, fine particle content (particle less than 75 microns), plasticity, cohesion, and capillarity height increase as we move toward the decanting lagoon. Despite these findings, there is currently no established methodology for managing the filling process or controlling wetting and drying cycles of TDs.
 
The study examines the drying and wetting cycles of tailings dams (TDs) and their impact on physical, mechanical and hydraulic properties. TDs are divided in four zones: the dike, the discharge zone, the transition zone and the distal zone (also known as the decantation pond). The filling process of the tailings dam involves five phases: 1) dumping and wetting, (2) segregation, (3) sedimentation, (4) consolidation, and (5) drying. The occurrence of drying and wetting cycles depends on the water balance, which can be expressed as Inflow = Outflow ± Storage Coefficient.  These cycles are influenced by factors such as changes in the discharge point within TD dike and reservoir, weather conditions, and other external factors. The analysis of drying and wetting cycles in TDs reveals several trends: (a) grain size, density, internal friction angle, and permeability decrease from the discharge zone toward the decantation pond and (b) porosity, fine particle content (particle less than 75 microns), plasticity, cohesion, and capillarity height increase as we move toward the decanting lagoon. Despite these findings, there is currently no established methodology for managing the filling process or controlling wetting and drying cycles of TDs.
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== Full Paper ==
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Revision as of 13:44, 7 June 2024

Abstract

The study examines the drying and wetting cycles of tailings dams (TDs) and their impact on physical, mechanical and hydraulic properties. TDs are divided in four zones: the dike, the discharge zone, the transition zone and the distal zone (also known as the decantation pond). The filling process of the tailings dam involves five phases: 1) dumping and wetting, (2) segregation, (3) sedimentation, (4) consolidation, and (5) drying. The occurrence of drying and wetting cycles depends on the water balance, which can be expressed as Inflow = Outflow ± Storage Coefficient. These cycles are influenced by factors such as changes in the discharge point within TD dike and reservoir, weather conditions, and other external factors. The analysis of drying and wetting cycles in TDs reveals several trends: (a) grain size, density, internal friction angle, and permeability decrease from the discharge zone toward the decantation pond and (b) porosity, fine particle content (particle less than 75 microns), plasticity, cohesion, and capillarity height increase as we move toward the decanting lagoon. Despite these findings, there is currently no established methodology for managing the filling process or controlling wetting and drying cycles of TDs.

Full Paper

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Published on 07/06/24
Submitted on 07/06/24

Volume Geotechnical characterization of mine tailings, 2024
DOI: 10.23967/isc.2024.324
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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