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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Temporal Changes in Air Injection Rate on Air Sparging Performance Groundwater Remediation.

Asaf Ben Neriah, +1 more
- 01 Nov 2016 - 
- Vol. 54, Iss: 6, pp 851-860
TLDR
This article investigates groundwater mixing and contaminant removal efficiency in different injection modes (i.e., continuous and pulsed), and compares them to those achieved in a third mode, which is denote as "rate changing," where injection is always on, and its rate is varying with time by abrupt changes.
Abstract
Air sparging (AS) is a commonly applied method for treating groundwater contaminated with volatile organic compounds (VOCs). When using a constant injection of air (continuous mode), a decline in remediation efficiency is often observed, resulting from insufficient mixing of contaminants at the pore scale. It is well known that turning the injection on and off (pulsed mode) may lead to a better remediation performance. In this article, we investigate groundwater mixing and contaminant removal efficiency in different injection modes (i.e., continuous and pulsed), and compare them to those achieved in a third mode, which we denote as "rate changing." In this mode, injection is always on, and its rate is varying with time by abrupt changes. For the purpose of this investigation, we conducted two separate sets of experiments in a laboratory tank. In the first set of experiments, we used dye plume tracing to characterize the mixing induced by AS. In the second set of experiments, we contaminated the tank with a VOC and compared the remediation efficiency between the different injection modes. As expected, we observed that time-variable injection modes led to enhanced mixing and contaminant removal. The decrease in contaminant concentrations during the experiment was found to be double for the "rate changing" and "pulsed" modes compared to the continuous mode, with a slightly preferable performance for the "rate changing" mode. These results highlight the critical role that mixing plays in AS, and support the need for further investigation of the proposed "rate changing" injection mode.

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Citations
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Joint response of chemistry and functional microbial community to oxygenation of the reductive confined aquifer.

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Entropy-based critical reaction time for mixing-controlled reactive transport

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Bounds to Air-Flow Patterns during Cyclic Air Injection into Partially Saturated Soils Inferred from Extremum States

TL;DR: In this paper, the air-pressure distributions resulting from harmonic (sinusoidal) or square-wave (step-pulse) air injection into infinite and semi-infinite (with an atmospheric pressure at the soil surface) soil domains are analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surfactant-enhanced air sparging with viscosity control for heterogeneous aquifers

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of surface-tension and/or viscosity changes in groundwater on the remedial performance of air sparging for heterogeneous aquifers were investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of increased groundwater viscosity on the remedial performance of surfactant-enhanced air sparging.

TL;DR: The addition of a thickener in the aqueous solution prior to air sparging increased the degree of air saturation and the sp arging influence zone, and enhanced the remedial potential of SEAS for contaminated aquifers.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An overview and analysis of site remediation technologies

TL;DR: An analysis of the site restoration techniques that may be employed in a variety of contaminated site cleanup programs and the important parameters that will help in the selection and implementation of one or more appropriate technologies in a defined set of site and contaminant characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

The concept of the Dilution Index

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduced a new macroscopic measure of dilution, the dilution index E, which measures the overall rate at which a tracer plume spreads about its centroid and depend critically on the heterogeneity of the formation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laboratory Study of Air Sparging: Air Flow Visualization

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used laboratory flow visualization experiments to study air sparging, an innovative technology for subsurface contaminant remediation, and found that air channel formation is sensitive to the various scales of heterogeneities.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Overview of In Situ Air Sparging

TL;DR: In situ air sparging (IAS) is becoming a widely used technology for remediating sites contaminated by volatile organic materials such as petroleum hydrocarbons as discussed by the authors, however, the technology is still in its infancy and has not been subject to adequate research, nor have adequate monitoring methods been employed or even developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of In-Situ Air Sparging for the Remediation of VOC-Contaminated Saturated Soils and Groundwater

TL;DR: In-situ air sparging is a developing remediation technique that has significant potential for use in VOC-contaminated saturated soils and groundwater as mentioned in this paper, which consists of injecting air below the contaminated area to partition the dissolved, sorbed and free phase VOCs into the gas phase and to enhance the aerobic biodegradation of the VOC.
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