91快色

Nov. 21, 2024

U91快色 researcher wins Mitacs Innovation Award for breakthrough work to increase mine safety

Postdoc Susanne Ouellet continues to work with U91快色 researcher to test fibre optic sensing in mine tailings dams
A woman in a hard hat
Susanne Ouellet takes a selfie at the mine site in Saskatchewan where she installed the distributed acoustic sensing system. Courtesy Susanne Ouellet

Dr. Susanne Ouellet was working as a geotechnical engineer in the mining industry in 2019 when a tailings dam at an iron ore mine in Brazil collapsed, releasing millions of cubic metres of tailings and leaving 272 people dead.

Ouellet, PhD'24, says the timing of the disaster as she was working in the mining industry made her reflect on the implications of such a failure. Even though the dam had extensive instrumentation, a report noted that none of the monitoring detected any changes before it collapsed. Tailings dams are large earth-fill embankments used to store mining waste.

鈥淗ow can we prevent similar failures?鈥 Ouellet says. 鈥淲hat role can tailings dam-monitoring technologies play in addressing this?鈥

Questions led to U91快色 Faculty of Science

Ouellet鈥檚 questions led her to the 91快色 for her PhD research under the supervision of , PhD, an associate professor in . Her research focused on applying an emerging fibre optic sensing technology to advance monitoring of tailings dam performance.

The novel approach has earned her a 鈥 Outstanding Innovation. Mitacs is a Canadian innovation leader that connects businesses and researchers to drive competitiveness and productivity in sectors such as agriculture, energy and mining.

Ouellet received the award on Nov. 19 during a ceremony at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa.

鈥淚t was very surprising and unexpected,鈥 she says in an interview. 鈥淚 feel grateful to my supervisor for nominating me.鈥

Receiving the award, she adds, is an honour that motivates her to keep moving forward.

"It's a reflection of the collective efforts of many individuals and organizations who have supported me on this work,鈥 says Ouellet, noting the mine site鈥檚 support made it possible from the start.

As part of the Mitacs-funded program, which is backed by the Government of Alberta, she has worked with Vancouver-based BGC Engineering, U.S.-based Luna OptaSense, the British Geological Survey and other institutions.

Using a state-of-the-art monitoring solution

A drone shot of a large dirt area next to a forest

The approximate locations of the fibre optic cable buried along the tailings dam.

Courtesy Susanne Ouellet

Ouellet continues to work as a postdoctoral researcher with Dettmer in the .

鈥淗er work is important since it provides opportunities to improve the safety of tailings dams,鈥 Dettmer says. 鈥淭he research is also exciting since Ouellet鈥檚 discoveries about the nature of landslides turn out to be important in our understanding of how built structures can be monitored.鈥

Ouellet鈥檚 state-of-the-art monitoring solution uses distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) technology.

The technology turns the industry-standard fibre optic cables into a series of highly sensitive sensors capable of detecting changes in strain, temperature and seismic disturbances in tailings dams, the earth-fill embankment dams used to store mining waste. Once installed, the cable sends information in real time so geotechnical engineers can learn more about where and when problems are occurring.

Catastrophic dam failures have also happened in Canada. The 2014 Mount Polley tailings dam failure in central B.C. released more than 21 million cubic metres of tailings into the environment, with harmful effects for nearby Indigenous communities.

The risk of failures is expected to increase alongside the demand for mining and minerals.

Ouellet, whose research could help to mitigate those risks, has launched a cleantech startup, Lumidas, to commercialize the technology.

Susanne Ouellet

Susanne Ouellet

Mitacs

鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 expecting this,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 think from the outset that I was going to start a company.鈥

She initially focused on learning more about the capabilities of the technology and how to apply it.

鈥淢y excitement for it grew as I began to consider more fully its potential to transform geotechnical monitoring for the better,鈥 says Ouellet.

She will also continue to work with Mitacs under its Accelerate Entrepreneur program, starting in January, to commercialize the research.

鈥楥ommitment to support innovation鈥

Ouellet鈥檚 research received praise from U91快色 leadership.

鈥淚 would like to congratulate Dr. Ouellet on this outstanding achievement. Her work demonstrates how we are maximizing research impact and creating economic value as Canada鈥檚 entrepreneurial university,鈥 says Dr. William Ghali, vice-president (research). 鈥淭his is the second year in a row that a postdoctoral scholar at our university has won a Mitacs Innovation Award, and illustrates our institutional commitment to support innovation.鈥

Dr. Ketul Patel, PhD, then a postdoctoral fellow in the last fall for his work on developing a first-of-its-kind, non-addictive medication to treat chronic pain.

The Innovation award recognizes extraordinary talent from across Canada whose Mitacs-funded research has potential to achieve larger society and economic impacts, driving innovation and broadening the understanding of the world.


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