A numerical study of steady state evaporative conditions applied to mine tailings


Autoria(s): Rassam, D. W.; Williams, D. J.
Data(s)

01/01/1999

Resumo

The suction profile of a desiccating soil is dependent on the water table depth, the soil-water retention characteristics, and the climatic conditions. In this paper, an unsaturated flow model, which simulates both liquid and vapour flow, was used to investigate the effects of varying the water table depth and the evaporation rate on the evaporative fluxes from a desiccating tailings deposit under steady-state conditions. Results obtained showed that at a critical evaporation rate, beyond which evaporation is no longer dictated by climatic conditions, the matric suction profiles remain basically unchanged. The critical evaporation rate varies inversely with the water table depth. It is associated with the maximum evaporative flux that might be extracted from a soil at steady-state conditions. The time required to establish steady-state conditions is directly proportional to the water table depth, and it acquires a maximum value at the critical evaporation rate. A detailed investigation of the movement of the drying front demonstrated the significance of attaining a matric suction of about 3000 kPa on the contribution to flow in the vapour phase.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:85485

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

National Res. Council Canada

Palavras-Chave #Engineering, Geological #Geosciences, Multidisciplinary #Matric Suction #Mine Tailings #Potential Evaporation #Steady State Evaporative Conditions #Surface Evaporative Flux #Shear-strength Characteristics #Soil #Behavior #C1 #291104 Environmental Technologies
Tipo

Journal Article