How long does it take a river to break down gold-mine cyanide?

411 viewsChemistryOther

I tried to research this but could only find that cyanide breaks down in water. What would happen to the cyanide if it leaked into a natural flowing river? Does it still break down? Would it kill all the wildlife before it broke down?

A gold mine has leaked cyanide ponds into a river and I want to understand the effects that will now take place. If there is a more appropriate thread for this question please let me know! Thanks 🙂

In: Chemistry

2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Gold-mine cyanide is usually sodium cyanide, NaCN. Its half-life in water is not known, but it dissolves very easily, creating free cyanide ions. The speed of this process is going to vary on a lot of factors like the salinity and pH of the water and the quantity, but in a free-moving river I’d imagine the NaCN would fully dissolve into Na+ and CN- ions rapidly, possibly essentially immediately if the quantity of NaCN is low enough. [A paper](https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdf/10.1086/333858) found that NaCN saturating still water decomposes in a matter of days; in rapidly moving water like a river it would be much, much shorter.

These cyanide ions are, in turn, very very reactive, and are going to react with just about everything in the water. Since we’re in water and there’s hydrogen ions everywhere, the vast majority CN reacts with hydrogen to form hydrogen cyanide, a toxic gas with a high solubility in water. HCN can hang out in water (or air if it escapes) for 1 to 4 years before decomposing into CO, CO2, N2 and H2O.

You are viewing 1 out of 2 answers, click here to view all answers.