Title: Remediation of Contaminated Sediments
1Remediation of Contaminated Sediments
- Danny Reible1, Louis Thibodeaux1, Don Hayes2
- 1Louisiana State University
- 2University of Utah
2Common Sediment Contaminants
- Metals As, Pb, Cd, Cr, Ni, Zn, Hg
- Organics
- Polychlorinated biphenyls - PCBs
- Polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons PAHs
- Chlorinated benzenes HCB, HCBD
- Petroleum hydrocarbons, undifferentiated oil and
grease
3Selecting Remedial Options
- NAS Committee On PCB Contaminated Sediments
- All decisions should be made within a risk-based
framework - Recommended Presidential and Congressional
Commission on Risk Assessment and Management
4Requirements for Risk
- Accessibility
- Can receptors come in contact with the
contaminants? - Are the contaminants within the biologically
active zone? - Availability
- Can the chemical desorb from the associated solid
phase into a phase that is ingested by the
receptor? - Can the organism encourage the desorption to an
available form? - Assimilative capacity
- Can the receptor accumulate or degrade the
contaminant in the available form? - Are there effects to the primary receptor or to a
secondary receptor?
5Processes Controlling Exposure
- Bioturbation
- Normal life cycle activities of benthic organisms
leading to sediment mixing and transport - Dominated by deposit feeders that ingest sediment
- Densities up to 100,000 worms/m2
- Organisms may process 10-20 times their wt/day
- Effects
- Moves sediment and associated contaminants
- Allows oxygen and nutrients deeper into sediments
- Contributes to accumulation of contaminants in
food chain - Turnover of upper layers of sediment at 0.3-30
cm/yr - Depth of influence 5-15 cm (90 of observations)
- Estimated via movement of radionuclides of
different half-lives
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8100
80
60
Moisture Content ()
Worm
Control
40
20
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Depth (mm)
970
60
50
40
Pyrene (mg/kg dry)
Worm
Control
30
20
10
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Depth (mm)
10(No Transcript)
11(No Transcript)
12Contaminant Availability
- Observation
- Locations exhibiting lower toxicity than might be
expected from reversible partitioning of sediment
contaminants - Potential Cause
- Reduced availability of contaminants
- Metals in reduced, insoluble form
- Organics strongly sorbed to solid phase
13Metals Mobility and Availability
- Present in one of three forms
- Chemically fixed (largely unavailable)
- Physically sorbed (exchangeable)
- Soluble (available)
- Significant fraction unavailable
- Tied up in insoluble precipitates (e.g. sulfides)
- Simultaneously extracted metals to acid volatile
sulfides-SEM/AVS - lt 1 Certain metals unavailable
- gt 1 Metals may or may not be available
- SEM/AVS ratio useful for Cadmium, Copper, Lead,
Nickel, Zinc
14Organic Contaminants
- Hydrophobic and strongly sorbing
- Or they wouldnt be sediment contaminants!
- Equilibrium accumulation in lipids governed by
porewater concentrations - Key characteristics desorption rate and extent
- kdesorption
- Ksw
- Biphasic desorption rates and/or equilibrium
commonly observed - Linear, reversible compartment
- Nonlinear, desorption resistant compartment
(often Langmuir in shape)
15Organic Desorption Resistance
- Various Models
- Fast, Slow desorbing compartments
- J. Pignatello
- Soft (young) and hard (aged) carbon
- W. Weber
- Natural organic carbon and soot
- R. Luthy
- Reversibly sorbed and sorbed w/ conformational
changes - M. Tomson
- Conclusion
- Some contaminants desorb rapidly and reversibly
- Some contaminant desorption limited in rate or
extent
16Desorption Resistant Model
17Resistant
18Reduced Availability
- Metals
- Simultaneously extracted metals (SEM)/Acid
volatile sulfides (AVS) - lt 1 Certain metals unavailable
- gt 1 Metals may or may not be available
- Organics
- Equilibrium accumulation in lipids governed by
porewater concentrations - Biota Sediment Accumulation Factor (BSAF)
- Accumulation normalized by lipid content and
organic carbon normalized sediment concentration - O(1) for reversibly sorbed contaminants in
benthic community - lt 1 for desorption resistant contaminants?
19Normalized Accumulation in Oligochaetes
Reversibly Sorbed Phenanthrene
BSAF
Desorption Resistant Phenanthrene
20ObservedPredicted
21Choosing Remedial Options
- Contaminant sources?
- Processes influencing exposure and risk?
- How do the prospective remedial approaches
interact with these processes to reduce exposure
and risk? - There are no default options!
- There are no options that do not leave a residual
risk!
22Conceptual Model
- Defines primary sources of risk
- Defines mechanisms that may translate that risks
to effects - Defines requirements of remedial approaches and
opportunities for control of processes/mechanisms
leading to risk - Provides framework for comparative evaluation of
risks
23Evaluation of Options
- Develop options consistent with conceptual model
- Consider entire life cycle of options
- Transportation and disposal of dredged material
- Repair/replacement of in-water or on-land
disposal sites - Risks associated with time required for approval
or implementation - Assess residuals and associated risk
- Compare options on an equal basis!
24Comparative Evaluation Metrics
- Primary metric Risk
- Secondary metrics
- Link to appropriate conceptual model of system
- Indicator species concentrations (e.g. fish)
- Contaminant mass (dynamic environment)
- Surficial average concentrations (stable
environment) - When risk due to diffuse contamination (not hot
spots) - SWAC surface area weighted average
concentration - Integral measures (allows incorporation of time)
25Contaminated Sediments
What are the Options?
P Natural Recovery P Passive In-Situ Treatment
or Containment P Removal and Upland Treatment or
Containment P Removal and Subaqueous Treatment
or Containment
26Sediment Management
- Risk defined by contamination in relatively small
well defined areas (hot spots) in dynamic
sediment environment with defined on-shore
disposal options? - Encourages removal options
- Risk defined by diffuse contamination in stable
sediment environment? - Encourages in-situ management options
- What about other sites?
- Requires site specific assessment and conceptual
model development
27Natural Recovery
- What is it?
- Use of natural processes to contain, dilute or
degrade contaminants - Typically associated with deposition of clean
sediment - When is it appropriate?
- Large volumes of contaminated sediment with
marginal level of contamination - Low energy, depositional environments
- Dredging for navigation not required
- Sources adequately controlled
- What are key assessment needs?
- Contaminant and sediment processes adequate
conceptual model of system - Potential for reversal of natural attenuation by
storm events/use changes - Potential for rate reductions due to control of
sediment loads to watershed - Long term monitoring of system recovery is
required - Example - Kepone in James River
- Expected to eliminate fish advisories faster than
active remedial alternatives
28Natural Attenuation
- Goal Reduce bioavailability and potential
transport. - Positive processes
- Natural capping with clean soils from watershed.
- Degradation in the bed these include
biotransformation, redox reactions, and other
abiotic reactions. - Burial at depth due to bed accretion from clean
soils. - Adsorption/sequestration on to cleaner soils.
- Bioturbation mixes cleaner particles downward
into the bed. - Solubilization processes at the S/W interface
releases contaminant quantities to the water
column at a slow rate and deplete, thereby, the
surface layers.
29Natural Attenuation
- Negative Processes
- Scour/ resuspension. Although some resuspension
may be acceptable any site where net scour occurs
is unacceptable. - Bioturbation is a 2-edged sword in this case
it moves contaminated particles at depth in the
bed and places them directly on the surface.
30Other Considerations
- If the bed at a site has been stable for the past
30-50 years it may be a good candidate for
natural recovery. - Normally when selected it is combined with
on-going site monitoring and institutional
controls. - Since it is continuously on-going, even at sites
undergoing more aggressive remediation
technologies, its contribution must be quantified.
31Examples of Natural Recovery Half-life
32Natural Recovery - Summary
Contaminated Sediments in Ports and Waterways,
Nat. Acad. Press, Wash. DC, 1997.
33In Situ Containment/Treatment
- What is it?
- Enhanced biodegradation
- In-situ solidification
- Containment - capping
- When is it appropriate?
- When removal may result in unacceptable or
increased risks - When hydraulic and other water body conditions
are supportive - When navigation dredging is not required
- What are the key assessment needs?
- Evaluation of effectiveness/engineering
feasibility of approach - Evaluation of long-term contaminant fate
- Evaluation of armoring needed to maintain
stability of sediments during treatment
34In Situ Treatment Options
- Enhance deposition to ensure clean surficial
sediments - Enhance natural fate processes
- Capping to drive anaerobic conditions and (often)
mobility reduction for metals - Addition or capping with reactants/catalysts
sources for sequestration and degradation - Active in-situ treatment (Limited development)
- In-situ solidification technologies
- In-situ reactor (e.g. auger/reactive hood
technologies)
35In Situ Capping Objectives
- Armor sediment for containment
- Design for stability in high flow conditions
- High confidence in describing dynamics of
noncohesive, granular media - Eliminates uncertainty of existing sediment
dynamics - Separate contaminants from benthic organisms
- Reduce dissolved release by increasing transport
path/resistance - Provide opportunities for habitat development
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38Sediment Profiling Camera
39Cap Effectiveness
- Elimination of erosion and bioturbation as
transport processes - Leaves diffusion (always present)
- Advection if seepage significant
- Transient behavior after cap placement
- Consolidation of sediment and cap materials
- Advection diffusion retarded by sorption
- Ksw focKoc
- Rf e rb Ksw
40Cap Breakthrough
- Effective cap thickness
- Seepage dominated breakthrough
- Diffusion dominated breakthrough
41Example
- Pyrene
- Koc 105
- Ksw, Rf 1000 if foc 1
- Cap
- Leff 30 cm
- Dcap 10-6 cm2/sec
- Transient time (diffusion) 10,000 years
42Steady State Cap Performance
- Diffusion dominated system
- Flux prior to capping (bioturbation)
- NA/rbWs 1 cm/yr (without erosion)
- Flux after capping
- NA/ rbWs Dcap/Leff Rf
- For pyrene example 0.001 cm/yr
- Advection dominated system
- Flux before and after capping ultimately equal!
43Innovative Caps
- Sand caps easy to place and effective
- Greater effectiveness can be achieved with
active caps - Encourage fate processes such as sequestration or
degradation of contaminants beneath cap - Discourage recontamination of cap
44Potential Cap TechnologiesAnacostia
Demonstration
- Aquablok for control of seepage and advective
contaminant transport - Zero-valent iron to encourage dechlorination and
metal reduction - Phosphate mineral (Apatite) to encourage sorption
and reaction of metals - BionSoil to encourage degradation of organic
contaminants - Natural organic sorbent to encourage
sorption-related retardation (reduction in
advective-diffusive transport)
45Summary In-Situ Management
- Relies on development of accurate conceptual
model - What are the sources of the contaminants and the
transport and fate processes that influence
exposure? - How can management options influence those
sources, transport and fate processes and
exposure? - Depends on understanding of natural processes and
employs remedial approaches that enhance and are
consistent with those processes
46Removal Options
- What is it?
- Hydraulic or mechanical dredging
- Generally requires temporary holding facility
-confined disposal facility (CDF) - Upland landfill or treatment/destruction in
incinerator, thermal desorber, biotreater, etc - When is it appropriate?
- Dredging required for navigation purposes
- Dredging will not result in unacceptable or
increased risks - Dredging can be accomplished with minimal
generation of contaminated water - Upland treatment and containment options
available and cost-effective - What are the key assessment needs?
- Evaluation of contaminant losses during dredging
and handling including residual suficial
sediments - Availability of adequate disposal facilities