Abstract:
A number of chemical and physical processes occur at
interfaces where solids meet liquids. Among them is heap and in-situ
leaching, an important technological process to extract uranium, precious
metals, nickel, copper and other compound. To understand the main
peculiarities of these processes a general mathematical approach is developed and applied. Its key point is new conditions at the free (unknown)
boundary between liquid and solid phases (pore space-solid skeleton).
The developed model can be used to analyze the dependence of the
dynamics of the free fluid-skeleton interface on the external parameters
of the process, like temperature, pressure, reagent concentration and
others. Therefore, the overall behavior of the process can be controlled
either by the rate of chemical reaction on the free interface via reagent
concentration or by the velocity at which dissolved substances are transported to or from the free surface.
The special attention is paid to a plausible justification of upscaling
from mesoscopic to macroscopic scales and its comparison with approaches usually used at the moment. Several examples illustrate the feasibility of the models.