Academic Journal

Hydromineral Resources of Saline Lakes of Mongolia and Russian Altai

Bibliographic Details
Title: Hydromineral Resources of Saline Lakes of Mongolia and Russian Altai
Authors: Isupov, Vitaly P., Ariunbileg, Sodov, Kolpakova, Marina, Shvartsev, Stepan L, Volkova, Nina I., Vladimirov, Alexander G.
Contributors: Томский государственный университет Геолого-географический факультет Научные подразделения ГГФ
Source: Advanced Materials Research. 2015. Vol. 1085. P. 166-170
Publisher Information: Trans Tech Publications, Ltd., 2015.
Publication Year: 2015
Subject Terms: уран, 13. Climate action, гидроминеральные ресурсы, бор, Российский Алтай, литий, Монголия, бром, 01 natural sciences, 6. Clean water, соленые озера, 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Description: Soda lakes located close to uranium deposits of West Mongolia contain elevated concentrations of uranium, reaching, in some cases, 1 to 3 mg/l. The concentration of uranium in the lakes of Russian Altai is lower and varies from 0.001 to 0.03 mg/l. The greatest uranium resources (about 6000 tons) are stored in Hyargas Nuur Lake, Western Mongolia. In addition to uranium and salts of sodium and magnesium increased contents of boron (up to 250 mg/l), bromine (up to 1.1 g/l), lithium (up to 600 mg/l), strontium (up to 8 mg/l) were determined in the lake waters. A scheme for complex processing of uranium-bearing lake waters, the first stage of which includes extraction of uranium using iron-containing sorbents or anion exchange resins is considered. Uranium compounds, bromine, iodine, boron, lithium and other elements found in salt lakes are an important raw material base for the production of advanced materials.
Document Type: Article
ISSN: 1662-8985
DOI: 10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.1085.166
Access URL: https://zh.scientific.net/AMR.1085.166.pdf
https://www.scientific.net/AMR.1085.166
http://vital.lib.tsu.ru/vital/access/manager/Repository/vtls:000529139
Rights: Trans Tech Publications Copyright and Content Usage Policy
Accession Number: edsair.doi.dedup.....927b3a59c17574edbea6f3038a32b74b
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
ISSN:16628985
DOI:10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.1085.166