Biodegradation%20and%20Natural%20Attenuation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Biodegradation%20and%20Natural%20Attenuation

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Title: Biodegradation%20and%20Natural%20Attenuation


1
Biodegradation and Natural Attenuation
2
Natural Attenuation
  • The biodegradation, dispersion, dilution,
  • sorption, volatilization, and/or chemical and
  • biochemical stabilization of contaminants to
  • effectively reduce contaminant toxicity,
  • mobility, or volume to levels that are protective
  • of human health and the ecosystem
  • (US EPA ORD, OSWER)

3
Natural Attenuation
  • Naturally occurring processes in soil and ground
    water that act without human intervention to
    reduce the mass, toxicity, mobility, volume or
    concentrations of contaminants
  • Biodegradation, dispersion, dilution, absorption,
    volatilization, and abiotic reactions

4
Evidence of Natural Attenuation
  • Plume Length Should Be
  • Seepage Velocity
  • x Time
  • Retardation Factor
  • Plume Length Is .....
  • Shorter
  • Thinner
  • Appears not to be moving

5
Natural Attenuation
A Do-Nothing Approach? Requires quantitative
assessment of a plumes behavior - amount,
extent, and rate of travel, as well as long-term
evidence of attenuation
6
Requirements
  • Site assessment - hydrogeology, geochemistry,
    microbiology
  • High tech approaches - sampling, analytical,
    modeling techniques
  • Prediction of plume behavior
  • May be combined with source/hot spot control
  • Containment of dissolved plume
  • A risk management strategy

7
Fate of Organic Contaminantsin the Subsurface
Volatilization
Sorption
Abiotic Transformations
Hydrolysis
Biodegradation
Advection
Dilution
8
Advection
  • Contaminants transported with ground water flow
  • No effect on contaminant concentration
  • No net loss of contaminant mass

9
Dispersion
  • Mechanical and hydraulic mixing
  • Decreases contaminant concentration in center of
    plume increases concentration on edges
  • No net loss of contaminant mass

10
Sorption
  • Partitioning of contaminants between aqueous
    phase and solid aquifer matrix
  • Decreases dissolved contaminant concentration
    until sorption capacity is reached
  • No net loss of contaminant mass

11
Volatilization
  • Movement of contaminants from aqueous phase in
    saturated zone to vapor phase in unsaturated zone
  • Can result in net loss of contaminant mass from
    the aquifer
  • Rarely a significant attenuation mechanism except
    in capillary zone

12
Dissolution (Leachability)
  • Transfer of contaminants from NAPL phase to
    aqueous phase
  • Most significant physical process controlling
    extent of the plume
  • Plume stable or expanding until residual (source)
    contaminants removed
  • No net loss of contaminant mass

13
Abiotic Transformations
  • Reactions such as hydrolysis and dehalogenation
  • Reduces aqueous concentrations of contaminants
  • Reduction of contaminant mass

14
Biotic Transformations
  • Aerobic and anaerobic biodegradation
  • Reduces aqueous concentrations of contaminant
  • Reduction of contaminant mass
  • Most significant process resulting in reduction
    of contaminant mass in a system

15
When to Enhance?
  • Bioremediation enhancement of natural
    attenuation processes
  • Conditions in the subsurface not conducive for
    degradation
  • Dissolved oxygen concentration - too high or too
    low
  • Low electron donor concentration
  • Too much mass for Natural Attenuation
  • Short time frame
  • Many processes available for bioremediation

16
When Not to Enhance?
  • Use Monitored Natural Attenuation (MNA)
  • MNA is reliance on natural attenuation processes
    to achieve site-specific remedial objectives in a
    time frame that is reasonable compared to other
    methods.
  • Appropriate only when demonstrated capable of
    meeting objectives in acceptable timeframe
  • Often used in conjunction with other active
    measures

OSWER Directive 9200.4-17, 1997
17
Observation of Natural Attenuation
18
MNA Advantages
  • Reduce potential for waste generation and human
    exposure during ex situ treatment
  • Less intrusive
  • Can be used with, or after, other remediation
    approaches
  • Reduction in cost

19
MNA Disadvantages
  • Increased time frame for remediation and
    monitoring (institutional controls)
  • Requires more complex and costly site
    characterization
  • Incomplete attenuation may result in increased
    toxicity (especially chlorinated solvents)
  • Potential for continued contaminant migration and
    cross-media transfer
  • Public acceptance

20
Critical Questions in MNA
  • How long will the plume extend?
  • How long will it take for the contamination to
    disappear?
  • Mass transfer vs. fate processes
  • Future land use
  • Natural resource damage assessment

21
Multi-Site Studies (Newell and Connor, API)
BTEX plumes at 42 retail LUST sites
213 ft x 150 ft
Chlorinated ethene (PCE, TCE, DCE, or VC) plumes
at 88 sites
1000 ft x 500 ft
Other chlorinated solvent plumes (TCA, DCA) at
29 sites
500 ft x 350 ft
Chloride, salt water plumes at 25 sites
700 ft x 500 ft
22
EPA Lines of Evidence
  • Historical groundwater and/or soil chemistry data
    that demonstrate clear trends of decreasing
    contaminant mass (concentration) that is not the
    result of migration
  • Hydrogeologic and geochemical data that are
    indirect indicators of attenuation mechanisms
  • Data from field and microcosm studies that
    directly demonstrate certain attenuation
    mechanisms

23
Assessment of MNA Potential
  • Source evaluation
  • components
  • distribution
  • loading rate
  • Plume evaluation
  • contaminants
  • groundwater chemistry
  • metabolic products
  • aquifer characteristics
  • Site characterization and data evaluation
  • Site conceptual model
  • Footprint analysis
  • Lab Studies and Modeling

24
Shrinking Ground Water Plume
Solute plume margin is receding back toward the
source area over time and the concentrations at
points within the plume are decreasing over time.
CROSS SECTION
PLAN VIEW
MW-5
MW-9
MW-1
WHEN ? Mass loading rate lt attenuation rate,
resulting in reduced plume mass in water-bearing
unit.
WHY ? Shrinking plume is evidence of natural
attenuation.
25
Stable Groundwater Plume
Solute plume margin is stationary over time and
concentrations at points within the plume are
relatively uniform over time or may decrease over
time.
CROSS SECTION
PLAN VIEW
MW-5
MW-9
MW-1
WHEN ? Mass loading rate attenuation rate,
resulting in plume stabilization.
WHY ? Stable plume is evidence of natural
attenuation.
26
Expanding Plume
Solute plume margin is continuing to move
outward or down-gradient from the source area.
CROSS SECTION
PLAN VIEW
MW-9
MW-1
MW-5
WHEN ? Mass loading rate gt attenuation rate,
resulting in increased plume mass in
water-bearing unit.
WHY ? Expanding plume may be evidence of natural
attenuation if expansion is less than expected
based on ground water flow.
27
Effort for Site Characterization and Data
Interpretation
NRC,2000
28
Conceptual Models of Source Distribution
Must determine source information during site
characterization to use MNA
a) Aqueous PhaseRelease to Saturated Zone
b) NAPL Release in Vadose Zone Only
c) LNAPL Releaseto Water Table
d) DNAPL Release to Saturated Zone
29
Natural Attenuation Footprints
NRC, 2000
30
Lab Studies and Modeling
  • Lab studies or microcosms
  • Must mimic site conditions
  • Data may be useful for rate estimates
  • Requires appropriate expertise throughout
  • Modeling
  • Budget analysis on electron donor and electron
    acceptor
  • Screening models
  • BIOCHLOR, etc.
  • Complex models
  • MODFLOW, etc.

31
MNA Observations
  • Attenuation occurs at all sites
  • Effectiveness dominated by mass reduction
    mechanisms, usually biodegradation
  • Rate and extent of biodegradation controlled by
    site specific conditions
  • Acceptance of MNA requires considerable analysis
    and monitoring
  • Tools for incorporating natural attenuation into
    groundwater management strategies continue to
    improve

32
What We Dont Know
  • When do you give up on natural attenuation?
  • What do you pump into an aquifer and why?
  • In what form do you add supplements to enhance
    bioattenuation? Liquid, gas or solid?
  • How long should you wait to see a response after
    enhancement of bioattenuation?
  • Are there compounds, classes of compounds, or
    aquifers that require bioaugmentation?
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