Hydrochemical characteristics and processes of groundwater in the Cenozoic pore aquifer under coal mining

被引:0
作者
Xiaoqing Chen
Haitao Zhang
Youjing Cai
机构
[1] Anhui University of Science and Technology,School of Earth and Environment
[2] Hefei Comprehensive National Science Center,Institute of Energy
[3] Gubei Coal Mine,Department of Geology and Hydrogeology
[4] Huainan Mining Group,undefined
来源
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2023年 / 30卷
关键词
Groundwater; Hydrochemistry; Hydrochemical boundary; Inverse geochemical modeling; Coal mining;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mining activities considerably affect groundwater quality and resources. It is crucial to investigate water chemistry and hydrochemical processes under coal mining settings for water environment protection and sustainable utilization of groundwater resources. In this study, 36 groundwater samples from the Cenozoic pore aquifer in the Gubei coal mine in Huainan (Anhui Province, China) were analyzed using hydrochemical, multivariate statistical methods, and inverse geochemical modeling. Results revealed a hydrochemical boundary around 100 m below the ground surface, forming two flow zones participating in different hydrological cycles. In the shallow (circulation) zone above the boundary, the main hydrochemical processes are silicate dissolution and cation exchange, followed by evaporite dissolution. In this zone, the Na+  + K+, Cl−, and SO42− concentrations are low and stable, forming low-salinity water (total dissolved solids [TDS] < 1 g/L) dominated by Na*Ca*Mg–HCO3 and Na*Ca–HCO3 types. At greater burial depths, the pH, TDS, Na+  + K+, Cl−, and SO42− concentrations in the groundwater gradually increase, while the HCO3− concentration gradually decreases, which is mainly due to the enhanced evaporite dissolution and decarbonation in the deep (circulation) zone below the hydrochemical boundary. In this zone, the Na+  + K+, Cl−, and SO42− concentrations are high and variable, forming high-salinity water (TDS > 1 g/L) dominated by Na–Cl and Na–Cl*SO4 types. A hydrochemical evolution model of the Cenozoic aquifer was finally established, which advances our understanding of the evolutionary processes of groundwater chemistry under mining drainage.
引用
收藏
页码:33334 / 33348
页数:14
相关论文
共 184 条
[11]  
Rath V(1999)Global silicate weathering and CO Chem Geol 159 3-30
[12]  
Carucci V(2004) consumption rates deduced from the chemistry of large rivers Chem Geol 204 1-21
[13]  
Petitta M(2017)Water geochemistry controlled by carbonate dissolution: a study of the river waters draining karst-dominated terrain, Guizhou Province, China Environ Earth Sci 76 2-10
[14]  
Aravena R(2012)Study of multi–aquifer groundwater interaction in a coal mining area in China using stable isotopes and major–ion chemical data Hydrogeol J 20 739-754
[15]  
Cattell RB(1960)Recharge sources and hydrogeochemical evolution of groundwater in the coal–mining district of Jiaozuo, China Educ Psychol Meas 20 141-151
[16]  
Chen S(2019)The application of electronic computers to factor analysis China Expo Health 11 81-94
[17]  
Gui HR(2018)Solute geochemistry and multivariate analysis of water quality in the Guohua phosphorite mine, Guizhou Province Hydrogeol J 26 1371-1385
[18]  
Sun LH(2017)Review: characterization, evolution, and environmental issues of karst water systems in Northern China Sci Total Environ 601–602 1-14
[19]  
Chen LW(2018)Hydro-geochemical paths of multi-layer groundwater system in coal mining regions—using multivariate statistics and geochemical modeling approaches Hydrogeol J 26 233-250
[20]  
Xu DQ(2008)Groundwater mixing and mineralization processes in a mountain-oasis-desert basin, northwest China: hydrogeochemistry and environmental tracer indicators J Hydrol 360 281-296