4.7 Article

Rare Earth Elements and Yttrium (REY) in coal mine drainage from the Illinois Basin, USA

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COAL GEOLOGY
Volume 217, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.coal.2019.103327

Keywords

Rare Earth Elements and Yttrium; Illinois Basin; Coal mine drainage; Hydrothermal activity

Funding

  1. Geology Department-SIUC Porter Jobling grant
  2. USGS [G16AC00449]

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The ever-growing demand in the USA and in the modern economy for rare earth elements, defined here as the lanthanide elements plus yttrium (REY), motivates the development of economically feasible and environmentally friendly approaches for domestic REY resources. Non-conventional sources, including coal mine drainage (CMD) hosting elevated concentrations of REY, have been explored as attractive secondary sources for metals recovery. Consequently, in this study we investigate CMD from abandoned coal mines in the Illinois Basin as a potential REY resource. We collected CMD from 35 abandoned coal mine sites in the Illinois Basin and investigated trends in REY enrichment and their association with CMD geochemical characteristics, including pH, the presence of other chemical elements of economic significance (i.e., Zn, Ni, Cr, Cu, V) as well as spatial patterns in relation to Permian magmatic intrusions of the Hicks Dome, a potential source of REY in the Illinois Basin. Additionally, the REY contents in possible source rocks for Illinois CMD were measured including coal from an underground mine and coal preparation plant in southern Illinois, mafic igneous rocks associated with Hicks Dome, and hydrothermal fluorite from Illinois fluorspar district. The REY concentrations in samples of CMD (filtered fraction) and associated coal and non-coal solids were determined by ICP-MS. The total concentration of REY in CMD, Sigma REYCMD varied between 1 and 9879 mu g/L with an average of 1059 mu g/L and critical- Sigma REYCMD (Nd, Eu, Tb, Dy, and Y) varied between 0.3 and 7212.5 mu g/L with an average of 611 mu g/L. Basin-wide, we found no statistical correlation between Sigma REYCMD and (1) pH of the CMD, or (2) proximity to the Permian magmatic intrusion at Hicks Dome in southern Illinois. The REYCMD, values normalized to North American Shale Composite (NASC) Sigma REYCMD/REYNASC exhibit enrichments in middle-REY for all CMD, but also enrichments in light-REY in some CMD. Statistically, we observed that Sigma REYCMD displays significant direct correlations with Al, Si, SO4, Zn, Ni, Co, and Cu and no-correlation with Fe, Ca, PO4, Ba, and V. Synthesis of the geochemical data suggests that coal mining sites with the highest Sigma REYCMD and critical-Sigma REY contents include non-coal bedrock dominated by silicates (high clay content) and coal mine wastes that were impacted by metal-rich hydrothermal solutions, which are predominantly located along the western and northern margins of the Illinois Basin. Particularly, sites with the highest hydrothermal input as approximated by Mississippi Valley-type mineralization (i.e., Zn contents) are prime candidates for REY, as well as other elements of potential economic value such as Al, Ni, Cr, V, and Co. Thus, CMD in the Illinois Basin could become a potential alternative domestic source of extractable REY, especially critical-Sigma REY, as well economically valuable metals.

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