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Pedro J.J. Alvarez, Ph.D., P.E., DEE University of Iowa Prospectus What are BTEX and why care about them? What is needed to biodegrade them? How to exploit ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overview


1
Principles Applications of BTEX Bioremediation
Pedro J.J. Alvarez, Ph.D., P.E.,
DEE University of Iowa

2
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3
Prospectus
  • What are BTEX and why care about them?
  • What is needed to biodegrade them?
  • How to exploit biodegradation for site cleanup?
  • What are the more serious technical and political
    challenges related to BTEX bioremediation?
  • What is epistemology and how can it help us
    address some of these challenges?

4
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5
Water, water everywhere, nor any drop to
drinkThe Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Samuel
Taylor Coleridge
6
Contaminants of Concern BTEX
Importance Relatively high solubility High
migration potential Toxicity Benzene can
cause leukemia at 5 µg/l Volatile, hydrophobic,
biodegradable
7
Requirements for Biodegradation
  • 1. Existence of organism(s) with required
    catabolic potential.
  • Xenobiotic will be degraded to an appreciable
    extent only if the organism has enzymes that
    catalyze its conversion to a product that is an
    intermediate or a substrate for common metabolic
    pathways.
  • The greater the differences in structure between
    the xenobiotic and the constituents of living
    organisms (or the less common the xenobiotic
    building blocks are in living matter), the less
    likelihood of extensive transformation or the
    slower the transformation.

8
Requirements for Biodegradation (contd)
  • 2. Presence of organism(s) in the environment.
  • BTEX degraders are commonly found, but
    differences in relative abundance of dissimilar
    phenotypes may lead to apparent discrepancies
    in the biodegradability of a given BTEX compound
    at different sites.
  • Depending on the relative abundance of different
    strains,
  • B could degrade earlier than T at one site, but
    the opposite may be observed at other sites.

9
Frequency Analysis of Biodegradation Capabilities
of 55 Hydrocarbon Degraders
100
90
80
70
60
50
Strains that degraded compound
40
30
20
10
0
B
T
E
p-X
m-X
o-X
N
10
Requirements for Biodegradation (contd)
  • 3. Compound must be accessible to organism
  • a) Physicochemical aspects (bioavailability).
  • Desorption, dissolution, diffusion, and mass
    transport
  • b) Biochemical aspects.
  • Membrane permeability (important for
    intracellular enzymes), uptake regulation.

11
Requirements for Biodegradation (contd)
  • 4. If catabolic enzymes involved are not
    constitutive, they must be induced
  • Inducer(s) must be present above specific
    treshold (e.g., T gt 50 mg/L)

12
Benzene Degradation by Pseudomonas CFS-215
Toluene enhanced enzyme induction
Control
T 0
Benzene Concentration (mg/L)
T 0.1 mg/L
T 50 mg/L
Time (days)
Alvarez and Vogel (1991) Appl. Environ.
Microbiol., 57 2981-2985
13
Cometabolic Degradation of o-Xylene by
Denitrifying Toluene Degraders
TOLUENE
mg/l
Active
Controls
days
o-XYLENE
mg/l
Active
Controls
days
Alvarez and Vogel (1995) Wat. Sci. Technol., 31
15-28
14
Requirements for Biodegradation (contd)
  • 5. Environment conducive to growth of desirable
    phenotypes and functioning of their enzymes
  • a) Presence of recognizable substrate(s) that
    can serve as energy and carbon source(s) (e.g.,
    the BTEX) and limiting nutrients (N and
    P, trace metals, etc.).
  • b) Moisture (80 of soil field capacity, or 15
    H2O on a weight basis, is optimum for vadose zone
    remediation. Need at least 40 of field
    capacity).
  • c) Availability of e- acceptors (e.g., O2 for
    oxidative reactions) or e- donors (e.g., H2 for
    reductive transformations). The e- acceptor
    establishes metabolism mode and specific
    reactions.

15
The electron tower concept
Half Reaction
Reduction Potential Hierarchy
E

H
volts
Oxidized
Reduced
-0.50

H
H
2
Benzene degradation to CO2 and CH4 under
methanogenic conditions

C
H
4.5 H
O

2.25 CO
3.75 CH
benzene
CO
6
6
2
2
4
2
D
Go

-(30 e-/
mol
) (96.63 kJ/volt) (-0.24 -(-0.29) volts)
-0.25
D
Go

-133 kJ/
mol
of benzene, or -
4.5 kJ/e

equiv
transferred
-
CH
CO
4
2
(barely feasible)
HS
-
SO
2-
4
Benzene degradation to CO2 under aerobic
conditions
0

C
H
7.5 O


6 CO
3 H
O
6
6
2
2
2
D
Go

-(30 e-/
mol
) (96.63 kJ/volt) (0.82 -(-0.29) volts)
D
107 kJ/e
-
equiv
transferred
Go

-3,200 kJ/
mol
of benzene, or -
Electron Tower
(24 x more feasible)
0.25
0.50
NO
-
N
2
0.75
3
O
H
O
2
2
16
Aerobic BTEX Degradation
  • BTEX are hydrocarbons (highly reduced) so their
    Oxidation to CO2 is highly feasible
    thermodynamically (fuel)
  • Aerobic BTEX biodegradation is fast (O2 diffusion
    is often rate-limiting)
  • Aerobic BTEX degraders are ubiquitous (e.g.,
    Pseudomonas)
  • Need oxygenase enzymes (i.e., enzymes that
    activate O2 and add it to carbon atoms in the
    BTEX molecule)
  • The ring must be dihydroxylated before ring
    fission. Once the ring is opened, the resulting
    fatty acids are readily metabolized further to
    CO2.

17
Anaerobic BTEX Degradation
  • Rates are much slower because anaerobic electron
    acceptors (e.g., NO3-, Fe3, SO4-2, and CO2)
    are not as strong oxidants as O2.
  • Benzene, the most toxic of the BTEX, is
    recalcitrant under anaerobic conditions
    (i.e., it degrades very slowly after TEX, or
    not at all)
  • Anaerobic degradation mechanisms are not fully
    understood. Benzoyl-CoA is a common
    intermediate, and it is reduced prior to ring
    fission by hydrolysis. The oxygen in the evolved
    CO2 is from water.
  • Anaerobic BTEX degradation processes (e.g.,
    denitrifying, iron-reducing, sulfidogenic, and
    methanogenic) are important natural attenuation
    mechanisms.

18
In aquifers, electron acceptors are used in
sequence. Those of higher oxidation potential
are used preferentially O2 gt NO3- gt Mn4 gt Fe3
gt SO4-2 gt CO2
Source Wiedemeier et al., 1999
19
Requirements for Biodegradation (contd)
  • 5. Favorable environment (continued)
  • d) Adequate temperature (rates double for ?T
    10C).
  • e) Adequate pH (6-9).
  • f) Absence/control of toxic substances (e.g.,
    precipitation of heavy metals, dilution of toxic
    conc.).
  • g) Absence of easily degradable, non-target
    substrates that could be preferentially
    metabolized (ethanol?).
  • 6. Time.
  • Without engineered enhancement, benzene
    half-lives on the order of 100 days are
    common in aquifers.
  • Want degradation rate gt migration rate

20
What is Bioremediation?
  • It is a managed or spontaneous process in which
    biological, especially microbiological, catalysis
    acts on pollutants, thereby remedying or
    eliminating environmental contamination present
    in water, wastewater, sludge, soil, aquifer
    material, or gas streams. (a.k.a.
    biorestoration).
  • Ex Situ (Above ground)
  • In Situ (In its original place, below ground)
  • Engineered Systems (biostimulation vs.
    bioaugmentation)
  • Natural Attenuation (intrinsic/passive)

21
Why Use Bioremediation?
  • Can be faster and cheaper (at least 10x less
    expensive than removal incineration, or pump
    and treat)
  • Minimum land and environmental disturbance (e.g.,
    generation of lesser volume of remediation
    wastes)
  • Can attack hard-to-withdraw hydrophobic
    pollutants
  • Done on site, eliminates transportation cost
    liability
  • Environmentally sound (natural pathways)
  • Does not dewater the aquifer

22
When is engineered bioremediation feasible?
  • Feasibility depends on
  • 1) Kh ? distribution of nutrients and e-
    acceptors (Kh gt 10-5 m/s)
  • 2) Adsorption ? bioavailability (depends on Kow
    and foc, problem for PAHs)
  • 3) Potential degradation rate (half life lt
    10 days)

2
Feasible
1
with
Feasible


Enhancement
0
log k (per day)
-1
Not feasible
-2
-3
6 5 4 3 2
1

- log
K

(cm/s)
h
23
  • Bioventing
  • Used to bioremediate BTEX trapped above water
    table
  • Vacuum pumps pull air through unsaturated soil
  • Need to infiltrate water (with nutrients) to
    prevent desiccation

Source MacDonald and Rittmanm (1993) EST,
27(10) 1974-1979
24
  • Water Circulation Systems
  • Used to bioremediate BTEX in saturated zone
    (Raymond)
  • Contaminated water is extracted, treated
    (air-stripping, activated carbon, or
    biodegradation), and recycled.
  • Some is amended with nutrients and reinjected
    (pulsing is better).
  • Clogging near injection well screens and
    infiltration galleries can be a problem
    (bacterial growth, mineral precipitation) but
    pulsing reduces clogging (may need occasional
    Cl2, H2O2)

25
  • Air Sparging
  • Injection of compressed air directly into
    contaminated zone stimulates aerobic degradation,
    strips BTEX into unsaturated zone to be removed
    by vapor-capture system
  • Not effective when low-permeability soil traps or
    diverts airflow

26
  • Biobarriers
  • Containment method that prevents further
    transport (hydraulic or physical controls on
    groundwater movement may be required to ensure
    that BTEX pass through barrier
  • Biologically active zone is created in the path
    of the plume by injecting nutrients and electron
    acceptors (could use oxygen-releasing compounds,
    or inject compressed air and form an air curtain)

Treated Water
Air Curtain
27
Benzoate addition as auxiliary substrate (1 mg/L)
stimulated benzene attenuation through 1-D
biobarrier
200
Sterile control
150
Effluent Benzene (µg/L)
Not amended
100
-
C
O
O
50
with benzoate
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Time (days)
Alvarez P.J.J., L. Cronkhite, and C.S. Hunt
(1988). Environ. Sci. Technol. 1998 32(5)
634-639
28
Bioremediation Market
  • According to the Organization for Economic
    Cooperation Development), the global market
    potential for environmental biotechnology doubled
    in the past 10 years to 75 billions in the year
    2000
  • In USA, we have 400,000 highly contaminated
    sites, and NRC estimates the cleanup cost to be
    on the order of 1,000 billions
  • In USA, the current bioremediation market is only
    about 0.5 billions

29
Bioremediation experienced many up- and downturns
  • 1950s Microbial infallibility hypothesis
    (Gayle, 1952)
  • 1970s Regulatory pressure stimulates
    development. Adding bacteria to contaminated
    sites becomes common practice. Failure to meet
    expectations (e.g., DDT accumulation) prompts a
    major downturn.
  • 1980s It becomes clear that fundamental
    processes need to be understood before a
    successful technology can be designed. This
    realization, along with the fear of liability and
    Superfund, stimulates the blending of science and
    engineering to tackle environmental problems.
  • 1990s Many bioremediation and hybrid
    technologies are developed. However, decision
    makers insist on pump and treat, and Superfund is
    depleted. Poor cleanup record and high costs
    stimulate paradigm shift towards natural
    attenuation and RBCA.

30
Aerobic Unsaturated Zone
Volatilization
Oxygen Exchange
Anaerobic core
Dissolution
Advection
Aerobic uncontaminated groundwater
Aerobic Processes
Mixing, Dilution
31
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
32
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
33
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
34
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
35
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
36
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
37
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
38
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
39
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
40
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
41
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
42
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
43
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
44
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
45
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
46
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
47
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
48
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
49
Atenuação Natural
PE
Fluxo da água subterrânea
50
Plume
Source
51
What is Monitored Natural Attenuation?
  • MNA is the combination of natural biological,
    chemical and physical processes that act without
    human intervention to reduce the mass, toxicity,
    mobility, volume, or concentration of the
    contaminants (e.g., biodegradation, dispersion,
    dilution, sorption, and volatilization).
  • Success depends on adequate site
    characterization, a long-term monitoring plan
    consistent with the level of knowledge regarding
    subsurface conditions at the site, control of the
    contaminant source, and a reasonable time frame
    to achieve the objectives.
  • MNA should not be a default technology or
    presumptive remedy. The burden of proof (e.g.,
    loss of contaminants at field scale, and
    geochemical foot-prints) should be on proponent,
    and evidence of its effectiveness should
    emphasize biodegradation.

52
Plume Dimensions Reflect Natural Attenuation
MEDIAN PLUME DIMENSIONS
BTEX Plumes (604 Sites)
132 ft
1000 ft
TCE Plumes (88 Sites)
Other chlorinated solvent plumes (29 Sites)
500 ft
Salt Water Plumes (chloride) (25 Sites)
700 ft
200
400
0
600
800
1000
Feet
53
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54
Concentration
safe
55
  • What is Risk-Based Corrective Action?
  • Clean source only to a level that will result in
    an acceptable risk at the potential receptors
    location (e.g., property boundary)
  • Need a mathematical model to calculate the
    required Co

receptor
Co ?
Concentration
safe
56
Analytical Solution of the Advection-Dispersion-So
rption Equation with First-Order Decay, for
Constant Rectangular Source (Domenico, 1987)
  • Models are useful analytical tools, and can be
    used to demonstrate that natural attenuation is
    occurring
  • Limited predictive capability (order-of-magnitude
    accuracy) groundwater flow and microbial
    behavior rarely follow simplifying assumptions.

57
Sensitivity Analysis Effect of Doubling a
Variable on Plume Length (Lp)
  • Variable Baseline Value ?Lp ()
  • ? (day-1) 0.0005 -24
  • Co (ppb) 25,000 7
  • Z (m) 3 7
  • Y (m) 10 7
  • ?x (m) 10 -1
  • foc 0.01 -17
  • n 0.3 17
  • ?b (g/cm3) 1.86 -17
  • Vw (m/day) 0.044
    33

Lovanh, N., Y.-K. Zhang, and P.J.J. Alvarez
(1999). Proc. 6th International Petroleum
Environmental Conference, Houston, TX.
58
Frequency Distribution for ? (n79)
How variable are biodegradation rates in the
field, and What are reasonable parameters for
RBCA models?
Mean 0.0112 day -1 Median 0.005 day-1
(t1/2 139 days)
100
Density
50
0
0.10
0.05
0.00
? (day-1)
Lovanh, N., Y.-K. Zhang, and P.J.J. Alvarez
(1999). Proc. 6th International Petroleum
Environmental Conference, Houston, TX.
59
Current Status of Bioremediation
  • We have made significant advances towards
    understanding the biochemical and genetic basis
    for biodegradation. However, bioremediation
    is still an underutilized technology.
  • Bioremediation is not universally understood, or
    trusted by those who must approve it. To take
    full advantage of its potential, we need to
    communicate better the capabilities and
    limitations of bioremediation, and answer
  • What is being done in the subsurface, Why, How,
    and Who is doing what?
  • How fast is it being done, and can we control it
    and make it go faster?
  • When can we meet cleanup standards in a
    cost-effective manner?
  • Can we reasonably predict that what we want to
    happen, will happen?

60
EPISTEMOLOGY OF BIOREMEDIATION
  • episteme knowledge
  • Theory of the method and basis we use to acquire
    knowledge, including the possibility and
    opportunity to advance fundamental understanding,
    sphere of action, and the philosophy of the
    scientific disciplines that we rely upon.
  • Reductionism
  • System analysis through separation of its
    components (eliminates
    complexity to enhance interpretation).
  • Based on the premise that a system can be known
    by studying its components, and that an idea can
    be understood if we understand its concepts
    separately.
  • Used increasingly in bioremediation research to
    investigate mechanisms.
  • Holism
  • The totality of a system is greater than the sum
    of its parts (synergism antagonism)

61
Epistemologys Uncertainty Principle
  • Reductionism simplifies the system, enhances
    hypothesis testing, and interpretation
  • It also augments lab artifacts and hinders the
    relevance of the information we obtain

High Low
High Low
Complexity, Relevance
Expt. control, Lab artifacts
Holism Reductionism
62
Implications
  • Quantitative extrapolation from the lab to the
    field is taboo. (interpolate but do not
    extrapolate)
  • Rely more on holistic disciplines (e.g., ecology,
    biogeochemistry) and iterate more between the
    field and the lab, between basic and applied
    research.
  • Multidisciplinary Research (interstices)
  • Aurea mediocridad (San Ignacio de Loyola)

63
Pay attention to detail. You never know who is
watching your work, and where your next
promotion or demotion will come from.
  • Bioremediation is seldom a straight line to an
    imagined goal (many branching decision points
    requiring flexibility and versatility)
  • Remedial technologies are rapidly evolving. Be
    committed to life-long learning, and be aware
    that imagination and creativity could more
    important than knowledge

64
Conclusions
  • Indigenous microorganisms can often destroy BTEX
    and other common groundwater contaminants,
    making bioremediation (often) technically
    feasible.
  • The pendulum recently swung towards natural
    attenuation. This can save money but take much
    longer to achieve cleanup and appear as if
    officials are walking away from contaminated
    sites. Early public involvement is critical to
    minimize such controversy.

65
Lets Take a Break!
66
TYPES OF MICROBES USED A. Indigenous
Microorganisms Used in most applications
(99) Pseudomonas have wide catabolic
capacity May need to enhance proliferation/enzyme
induction B. Acclimated Strains Preselected
naturally occurring bacteria Generally not
needed for BTEX Often fail to function in situ
common reasons - Conc. of target compound too
low to support growth - Other substances and
organisms inhibit growth - Microbe uses other
food than target contaminant - Target compound
not accessible to microbe C. Genetically
Engineered Microbes (GEMs) Could combine
desirable traits from different microbes -
Ability to withstand stress degrade
recalcitrant compounds - Not needed for BTEX,
many technical political constraints
67
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69
Análisis de varianza de las interacciones BTEXN
  • Las capacidades de degradación fueron mas amplias
    cuando los BTEXN fueron alimentados como mezcla
    que separadamente (particularmente cuando el T
    estaba presente)
  • Las interacciones negativas (e.g., inhibición
    competitiva, toxicidad) fueron estadísticamente
    significativas cuando se alimentó 1 mg/L a cada
    una.
  • Por estadística de Kappa se encontró una
    correlación significativa entre las habilidades
    para degradar T y E, p-X y m-X, y p-X y o-X. La
    falla de degradar B fue correlacionada con la
    inhabilidad para degradar o-X.

70
Monods Equation
k
Specific degradation rate dC/dt/X
X
C
k


dC
k
-


2
C
K
dt
S

KS
Contaminant Concentration, C
71
Why First-Order Degradation Rates? Monods
Equation, When C ltlt KS
X
k
C
dC


k
X


-
-


C





K
K
dt
C
S
S
dC
- lC

dt

(not constant)
72
Also, Mass Transfer Limitations Are Conducive to
First-Order Kinetics (even if C gt Ks)
73
Alta concentración microbiana Taza más rápida
Simulaciones empleadas k 0.28
g-T/g-células/día KS 8.6 mg-T/L Y 0.6 g-
células/g-T
80
60
107 células/mL
TOLUENO (mg/L)
40
102 células/mL
20
0
0
30
60
90
120
150
Tiempo (Días)
74
Por qué es tan difícil limpiar acuíferos?
Detectar la contaminación en aguas subterráneas
es como buscar una aguja en un pajar. Los puertos
de muestreo pueden ser demasiado profundos, no
muy profundos o en un lugar equivocado.
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