Record Details

Title Silica Extraction at Mammoth Lakes, California
Authors William Bourcier, William Ralph, Mackenzie Johnson, Carol Bruton and Pablo Gutierrez
Year 2006
Conference International Mineral Extraction Conference
Keywords
Abstract The purpose of this project is to develop a cost-effective method to extract marketable silica (SiO2) from fluids at the Mammoth Lakes, California geothermal power plant. Marketable silica provides an additional revenue source for the geothermal power industry and therefore lowers the costs of geothermal power production. The use of this type of ‘solution mining’ to extract resources from geothermal fluids eliminates the need for acquiring these resources through energy intensive and environmentally damaging mining technologies. We have demonstrated that both precipitated and colloidal silica can be produced from the geothermal fluids at Mammoth Lakes by first concentrating the silica to over 600 ppm using reverse osmosis (RO). The RO permeate can be used in evaporative cooling at the plant; the RO concentrate is used for silica and potentially other (Li, Cs, Rb) resource extraction. Preliminary results suggest that silica recovery at Mammoth Lakes could reduce the cost of geothermal electricity production by 1.0¢/kWh.
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