United States
                   Environmental Protection
                   Agency
Risk Reduction
Engineering Laboratory
Cincinnati, OH 45268
                   Research and Development
EPA/600/S2-89/008 Oct. 1989
&EPA          Project Summary
                    Radio  Frequency  Enhanced
                    Decontamination  of Soils
                    Contaminated  with  Halogenated
                    Hydrocarbons

                    H. Dev, J. Bridges, G. Sresty, J. Enk, N. Mshaiel, and M. Love
                     There has been considerable effort
                   in the development  of  innovative
                   treatment technologies for the clean-
                   up of sites containing  hazardous
                   wastes such as hydrocarbons  and
                   chlorinated hydrocarbons. Typical
                   examples of such waste material are:
                   chlorinated solvents, polychlorinated
                   biphenyls, waste aviation fuels, gaso-
                   line, etc. The feasibility  of treating
                   waste sites containing such materials
                   by in-situ radio frequency heating
                   was  established  by this  study
                   through bench- and pilot-scale exper-
                   iments. A design for an  in-situ field
                   test was developed for the treatment
                   of  sites  containing  solvents  and
                   aviation  fuel.  Cost  studies were
                   performed to estimate the treatment
                   cost of a  system for  the decontam-
                   ination of sites containing fuel, etc.
                      This  Project  Summary was
                   developed by  EPA's Risk Reduction
                   Engineering Laboratory, (formerly
                   HWERL)  Cincinnati,  OH, to announce
                   key findings of the research project
                   that is fully documented in a separate
                   report of the same title  (see Project
                   Report ordering information at back).

                   Introduction
                     Each year, various agencies  of the
                   U.S. Government and institutions in the
                   private sector discover yet new locations
                   of previously forgotten  waste disposal
                   sites which pose a continuous threat to
                   the environment,  public   safety,  and
                   health. Such sites pose a threat because
                   they  contain  hazardous chemical
substances which were disposed  of
improperly in uncontrolled burial sites or
due to failure of controlled  sites  to
prevent migration  of mobile chemicals.
Two large families of hazardous chem-
icals of commerce which were  disposed
in such sites as waste are hydrocarbons
and chlorinated hydrocarbons.
  Over the last 50 to 80 years, millions
of  tons of such chemicals have been
disposed of by this  and other  environ-
mentally unsound methods. For many
chemicals,  their hazardous and toxic
properties were not known at the time of
disposal; therefore, burial in uncontrolled
landfills was considered appropriate. For
example, polychlorinated biphenyls, DDT,
hexachlorobenzene,  pentachlorophenol,
creosote, etc., were large-volume chem-
icals that were routinely produced, used,
and disposed of until  their harmful effects
on the  environment were understood.
Although many such chemicals are now
banned from  commercial use  or  have
strict  use limitations, they persist in the
environment  due to their chemical
stability. They are  also widespread,
having escaped from their original sites
of disposal due to fluid mobility, leaching
action of rain, and airborne dispersion as
vapor and aerosol emissions from the
disposal sites.

Summary
  The feasibility of the radio frequency
(RF) in-situ heating and soil decontam-
ination  process was  successfully
established  in this project. In  a related
but different project  funded by  U.S. Air

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Force,  a successful field  test has been
conducted in which  500  ft3  of  soil
containing jet  fuel and chlorinated
solvents were decontaminated by in-situ
heating, The results of these two studies
warrant further optimization and scale-up
of the process.
   In this  project  the  feasibility  of the
following was established:
•  Sandy  soil containing jet fuel  and
   chlorinated   solvents  can   be
   decontaminated  by  heating to  88°  to
   160°C for a period of 14 to 40 hr.
•  Decontamination of  90% to 99%  was
   achieved for fuels and solvents.
•  PCB 1242 can  be removed  from
   sandy soil by heating to a temperature
   range of 150° to 300° C.
•  Removal of 72% to 99% was obtained
   for  PCB 1242 depending  on  the
   treatment conditions.
•  In the above experiments, vaporiza-
   tion, steam distillation,  or stripping  is
   used as the decontamination mechan-
   ism.
•  The  vaporized  contaminants  are
   recovered as a  high concentration gas
   mixture from the soil surface. Steam is
   also present from soil  moisture. This
   gas  stream  will  require  onsite
   treatment.
•  Chemical decontamination  of PCB
   1260 with  the  in-situ application  of
   potassium  polyethylene  glycol  fol-
   lowed by in-situ heating does not ap-
   pear to be feasible.
•  Feasibility of  the  in-situ  heating
   process should  be evaluated for polar
   materials and  for different types  of
   soil.
Decontamination of Soil
Containing Fuels and Solvents
   Bench-  and pilot-scale experiments
were  performed  on  75 to 4000  g of
spiked soil containing tetrachloroethylene
and chlorobenzene  mentioned above. In
these experiments, 90% to 99% removal
of the contaminants was observed.  The
initial contaminant concentration  level
ranged between 0.5 to 1000 ppm. Mass
balance  calculations were  done  for the
bench-scale experiments.  Mass balance
closure of 75% to  104%  was demon-
strated in most of the experiments.  The
pilot-scale  experiments  were performed
on 6-ft tall columns of soil. It was shown
that  uniform  decontamination  occurs
along the length of the soil bed.
   Jet fuel-contaminated soil was heated
in 6-ft tall columns. It  was shown  that
90% to 99%  removal of total  aromatics
and total non-aromatic fraction is feasible
by  treatment at 150°  to  160°C  for  a
period of 14 to 40 hr.

In-Situ Field Test
   A field test design was prepared for
heating 500 ft3 of soil containing solvents
and jet fuel An in-situ field test has been
conducted under  a separate project
funded by  U.S.  Air Force,  Headquarters,
Air Force Engineering  and Service
Center, Tyndall  Air Force Base, Florida.
Preliminary results  of  this in-situ test
indicate 90% and 99% removal of total
aliphatics  and total  aromatics, respec-
tively.


Thermal Decontamination of
PCB 1242
   Soil spiked with PCB 1242 was heated
to a temperature range of 150° to 300°C.
Depending on the temperature, 72%  to
99%  removal of PCB was observed.  It
was discovered  that  mass balance clo-
sure on PCB  1242 is inversely  related to
the treatment temperature. For example,
at 300°C, 99% removal of PCB 1242 was
observed, but the mass balance closure
was only  7% to  17%. On the other hand,
at 150°C,  72%  to  87% removal and  a
mass  balance closure of 73%  to 82%
was  observed.   In  these  experiments,
Soxhlet extraction of  soil was  utilized  to
determine  PCB concentration in  soil.
Further work  is necessary to  determine
the fate  of PCB in  those experiments
where good  removal but  poor  mass
balance was obtained.


Chemical Decontamination of
PCB 1260
   The feasibility of in-situ  chemical
treatment  of PCB 1260  with  potassium
polyethylene   glycol  (KPEG)   was
investigated.  The  RF  in-situ  heating
technique is used to promote the reaction
by removing the  moisture and  increasing
the reaction rate at higher temperature.
   When the soil is well mixed with KPEG
and heated in a loosely covered container
in an oven  at 140°C,  up  to  99%
destruction of PCB  1260  is obtained  in
2.5 to 8  ht. When  a soil column  con-
taining PCB 1260 and KPEG is heated in
a cylindrical reactor,  only  16% to 35%
destruction of PCB 1260 was  observed.
Additional experiments are necessary  to
determine whether  air is  necessary  to
support the reaction  between KPEG and
PCB  1260-containing soil. The prelim-
inary  conclusion, however,  is that in-situ
treatment  of soil containing PCB  1260
with KPEG reagent and RF heating may
not be feasible.
Cost for Treatment of Fuels
and  Solvents

   Treatment cost for soil containing  jet
fuel  and chlorinated  solvents  was
developed for 74,000 ft3 (96 ft x 96 ft x 8
ft) of soil. The capital  cost of  the RF
treatment system is  estimated to be $1.6
million. The  total treatment cost  per 100
Ib  varies  between  $1.50  to  $2.90
depending on  the soil moisture content
(5% to 20%) and treatment temperature
(100° to250°C).
Description and Advantages of
the Heating System
   In-situ  RF heating is performed by
energizing the soil with electromagnetic
energy in the radio frequency band. The
heating mechanism is similar to that of a
microwave oven. The energy is deposited
by means of an electrode array emplaced
in bore holes drilled  through the soil. The
array  is covered by a vapor barrier for the
containment and collection of gases and
vapors rising up to the surface.
   The frequency of  the  applied power is
selected from the industrial, scientific and
medical   (ISM) band set aside  by the
Federal   Communications Commission.
The specific frequency is selected based
on the dielectric properties of the soil, the
depth of  treatment,  and the size of the
heated volume.
   The main advantages of  RF heating
are: true  in-situ process is feasible, heat
transfer  fluids or  fuel combustion
products  do not dilute  the  gases and
vapors,  heating is  not dependent on
relatively  slow processes of conduction
or convection,  and  the  process is cost
effective.

Recommendations
   It is recommended that the feasibility
of thermal  recovery  of  fuels, solvents.
and lower chlorinated PCBs be extended
to other types of soils such as clayey and
loamy. All the  thermal  recovery  exper-
iments performed in this  project were
done with sandy soil.
   Other types of chemical contaminants
should be evaluated for  decontamination
by the thermal method. Specifically, polar
materials  which are  likely  to  exhibit
stronger adsorption characteristics should
be  evaluated  for  each of  the  three
different  soil  types.  For  example,
materials  like phenols, amines,  organic
acids, etc., should  be studied. Different
types of other  chemicals may be
amenable to decontamination  by  the in-
situ  heating  methods.  For  example,
pesticides and  other agricultural  chem-
icals,  and coal-derived liquids  present as

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contaminants at the sites of old coal-gas
plants, should be evaluated in laboratory
studies.
   Through a simple  modification of the
heating system, it should be possible to
treat  contaminated  soil  surrounding
leaking underground  storage  tanks.
Feasibility studies should  be  conducted
on this concept.
   Significant reduction of PCB 1242 can
be  achieved by  thermal  treatment of
PCB-contaminated  soil. However,  prob-
lems were encountered in closing a mass
balance  on PCB. Additional  studies
should be  performed to  determine the
fate of the PCB molecule when soil is
heated to a temperature range of 150° to
300°C.
   In-situ chemical decontamination of
soil by the application of KPEG reagent
should be further studied to evaluate the
effects, if any,  of  reaction atmosphere.
Experiments on  soil  decontamination
should be performed under nitrogen as
well as under  different compositions of
nitrogen/oxygen blends.
   The full  report  was  submitted in
fulfillment of Cooperative Agreement CR
811529 by NT  Research  Institute  under
the sponsorship  of  the  U.S. Environ-
mental Protection Agency.

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   H. Dev, J.  Bridges, G.  Sresty,  J.  Enk,  N.  Mshaiel, and M. Love are  with IIT
         Research Institute, Chicago, IL 60616
   Charles J. Rogers is the EPA Protect Officer (see below).
   The complete report, entitled  "Radio Frequency Enhanced Decontamination of
         Soils Contaminated  with Halogenated Hydrocarbons,"   (Order  No. PB
         89-161 7641 AS; Cost: $21.95, subject to change)  will be available only
         from:
             National Technical Information Service
             5285 Port Royal Road
             Springfield, VA22161
             Telephone: 703-487-4650
   The EPA Project Officer can be contacted at:
             Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
             Cincinnati,  OH 45268
United States                   Center for Environmental Research
Environmental Protection         Information
Agency                         Cincinnati OH 45268
Official Business
Penalty for Private Use $300

EPA/600/S2-89/008

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