Abstract

A series of sodium polysulfides (SPSs) with different sulfur indexes was prepared as stabilizers to amend elemental mercury-contaminated artisanal small-scale gold mine (ASGM) tailings in Hubei, China, by controlling the molar ratio of sulfur and sodium sulfides as 1:1, 2:1, 3:1, and 4:1 during the synthesis. XRD, XPS, and laser Raman spectroscopy all suggested that the synthesized SPSs were a mixture of multiple polysulfides, sulfur, sodium sulfides, and sodium thiosulfate. Based on toxicity characteristic leaching procedure test (TCLP), mercury stabilization efficiency of SPSs was evaluated and proved to be more superior than sulfur, sodium sulfide, and also calcium polysulfide, with an optimal stabilization efficiency of 97.16% at SPS/THg = 1:2, SPSs pH = initial pH, and liquid-to-solid ratio = 20:7. A pseudo-second-order kinetic model was able to interpret the stabilization kinetics and demonstrated that mercury stabilization rate increased with the sulfur index in the SPSs, but excess SPSs were potentially to inhibit the precipitation of mercury. Speciation analysis results determined with sequential extraction indicated that the unstable mercury, elemental mercury, and organic-bound mercury fractions decreased respectively by up to 88.6%, 53.5%, and 26.3%. Pearson correlation analysis showed that the mercury stabilization in the mine tailings amended with SPSs mainly occurs from the precipitation of the elemental mercury, and the organic mercury fraction reduction was correlated with the decrease of the unstable mercury.

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