Microbe-mineral interactions within kimberlitic fine residue deposits: impacts on mineral carbonation

IF 3.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Frontiers in Climate Pub Date : 2024-07-05 DOI:10.3389/fclim.2024.1345085
T. Jones, J. Poitras, A. Levett, Guilherme da Silva, Samadhi Gunathunga, Benjamin Ryan, A. Vietti, Andrew Langendam, Gordon Southam
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Abstract

The observation of photosynthetic biofilms growing on the Fine Residue Deposit (FRD) kimberlite produced by the Venetia Diamond Mine, Limpopo, South Africa suggests that processed kimberlite supports bacterial growth. The presence of this biofilm may aid in the acceleration of weathering of this ultra-mafic host material – a process that can sequester CO2 via carbon mineralization. Laboratory and field trial experiments were undertaken to understand the microbe–mineral interactions occurring in these systems, and how these interactions impact geochemical cycling and carbonate precipitation. At laboratory scale it was discovered that using kimberlite as a growth supplement increased biomass production (up to 25-fold) and promoted microbiome diversity, while the inoculation of FRD systems aided in the aggregation, settling, and dewatering of kimberlitic slurries. Field trial studies combining photosynthetic biofilms (cultured in 3 × 1,000 L bioreactors) with FRD material were initiated to better understand microbially enhanced mineral carbonation across different depths, and under field environmental conditions. Over the 15-month experiment the microbial populations shifted with the kimberlitic environmental pressure, with the control and inoculated systems converging. The natural endogenous biosphere (control) and the inoculum accelerated carbonate precipitation across the entire 40 cm bioreactor depth, producing average 15-month carbonation rates of 0.57 wt.% and 1.17 wt.%, respectively. This corresponds to an annual CO2e mine offset of ~4.48% and ~ 9.2%, respectively. Millimetre-centimetre scale secondary carbonate that formed in the inoculated bioreactors was determined to be biogenic in nature (i.e., possessing microbial fossils) and took the form of radiating colloform precipitates with the addition of new, mineralized colonies. Surficial conditions resulted in the largest production of secondary carbonate, consistent with a ca. 12% mine site CO2e annual offset after a 15-month incubation period.
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金伯利岩细渣矿床中微生物与矿物的相互作用:对矿物碳化的影响
在南非林波波省维尼夏钻石矿(Venetia Diamond Mine)出产的细残留矿床(Fine Residue Deposit,FRD)金伯利岩上生长的光合生物膜表明,经过加工的金伯利岩支持细菌生长。这种生物膜的存在可能有助于加速这种超基质主材料的风化--这一过程可通过碳矿化封存二氧化碳。为了了解这些系统中微生物与矿物之间的相互作用,以及这些相互作用如何影响地球化学循环和碳酸盐沉淀,我们进行了实验室和实地试验。在实验室规模的实验中发现,使用金伯利岩作为生长补充物可提高生物量产量(高达 25 倍)并促进微生物群的多样性,而接种 FRD 系统有助于金伯利岩浆的聚集、沉淀和脱水。将光合生物膜(在 3 × 1,000 升生物反应器中培养)与 FRD 材料相结合的实地试验研究已经启动,目的是更好地了解在不同深度和实地环境条件下微生物对矿物碳化的促进作用。在为期 15 个月的实验中,微生物种群随着金伯利岩环境压力的变化而变化,对照系统和接种系统趋于一致。自然内源生物圈(对照组)和接种物加速了整个 40 厘米生物反应器深度的碳酸盐沉淀,15 个月的平均碳化率分别为 0.57 wt.% 和 1.17 wt.%。这相当于每年分别抵消了约 4.48% 和约 9.2% 的 CO2e 矿。经测定,接种生物反应器中形成的毫米-厘米级次生碳酸盐具有生物成因性质(即具有微生物化石),并以辐射胶体沉淀物的形式出现,同时增加了新的矿化菌落。表层条件下产生的次生碳酸盐最多,这与 15 个月培养期后矿区每年约 12% CO2e 的抵消量相一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Climate
Frontiers in Climate Environmental Science-Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
233
审稿时长
15 weeks
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