O
    ^    I    In  Situ  Treatment  Technologies for
   ^r^°     Contaminated Soil
                     ENGINEERING FORUM ISSUE PAPER
                  Contents
 Section
 1.0 Introduction	  1
 2.0 Background on Issue Paper	  2
 3.0 In Situ Treatment Technologies  	  2
    3.1 Physical/Chemical Treatment
       Technologies	  2
       3.1.1 Soil Vapor Extraction  	  2
       3.1.2 Solidification/Stabilization 	  6
       3.1.3 Chemical Oxidation	  9
       3.1.4 Soil Flushing  	  12
       3.1.5 Electrokinetic Separation	  14
    3.2 Biological Treatment Technologies ...  15
       3.2.1 Bioventing  	  16
       3.2.2 Phytoremediation	  20
       3.2.3 Monitored Natural Attenuation  .  23
    3.3 Thermal Treatment Technologies ....  25
       3.3.1 Electrical Resistance Heating ...  26
       3.3.2 Steam Injection and Extraction  .  26
       3.3.3 Conductive Heating	  29
       3.3.4 Radio-Frequency Heating 	  31
       3.3.5 In Situ Vitrification 	  32
 4.0 Notice, Disclaimer, and Acknowledgments  34
5.0 Abbreviations and Acronyms
                                         35
 1.0 Introduction

 This issue paper provides summary information on
 a  wide variety of in situ technologies for the
 treatment of contaminated soil in both the vadose
 zone and saturated and unsaturated source zones.
 The in situ technologies presented involve applying
 chemical, biological, or physical processes to the
 subsurface  to  degrade,  remove,  or  immobilize
 contaminants without removing  the bulk  soil.
Compared to excavation and ex situ treatment, the
use of these technologies offers several benefits,
such as addressing deep contamination and gener-
ally costing less.

The summary for each in situ technology includes a
basic description of the technology, its implemen-
tation, applicability based on contaminants and site
characteristics, general limitations, costs, and status
of the technology's application. Information in this
paper is intended to give project managers and engi-
neers a basic understanding of the technology that
will allow for further consideration of its applica-
bility  at a  site. Project managers and engineers
seeking guidance on the design and operation of
these technologies should refer to the references
listed in this paper and other material on the specific
technology of interest.

The  treatment technologies  presented  include
common practices as well as innovative alternatives
for treating  contaminated soil and source zones in
situ. The paper does not address technologies in the
experimental phase, such as nanoscale iron injec-
tion, nor does it present containment technologies,
such as capping, liners, and barrier walls.

Information provided in this paper comes from a
number of sources. In general,  every attempt has
been made  to use technical literature, including
articles, textbooks, and U.S. Environmental Protec-
tion Agency (EPA) and other agency documents.
Where appropriate and possible, Web links have
been provided for additional information. This paper
is not intended to serve as guidance or policy, nor
does it indicate the  appropriateness of using  a
technology at a specific site.
 United States
 Environmental
 Protection Agency
                                  Solid Waste and
                                  Emergency Response
                                  5203P
                           EPA542/F-06/013
                              November 2006
                          www.epa.gov/tio/tsp

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2.0 Background on Issue Paper

This issue  paper was developed at the  request of
EPA's Engineering Forum to provide information to
EPA project managers on the application of in situ
treatment technologies for  contaminated soil.  The
Engineering, Federal Facilities, and Ground Water
Forums, established by EPA professionals in the ten
regional  offices, are committed to identifying and
resolving scientific, technical, and engineering issues
impacting the  remediation  of Superfund sites and
corrective action sites under the Resource Conser-
vation and  Recovery Act (RCRA). The forums are
supported by and advise the Office of Solid Waste
and Emergency Response's  (OSWER)  Technical
Support Project, which established Technical Support
Centers in  laboratories operated by the Office of
Research and Development, Office of Radiation Pro-
grams, and the Environmental Response Team. The
centers work closely with the forums, providing state-
of-the-science  technical assistance to EPA  project
managers.

3.0 In Situ Treatment  Technologies

For purposes of this paper, the in situ technologies are
categorized into three major  groups based on the
primary mechanism by which treatment is achieved:

•   Physical/Chemical Treatment Technologies
    Biological Treatment Technologies
•   Thermal Treatment Technologies

Physical/chemical treatment includes soil vapor ex-
traction,  solidification/stabilization, soil flushing,
chemical oxidation, and  electrokinetic separation.
Biological treatment uses microorganisms or vegeta-
tion to degrade, remove, or immobilize contamination
in soil. Biological technologies include bioventing,
phytoremediation, and monitored natural attenuation.
Electrical resistivity heating, steam injection  and ex-
traction, conductive heating, radio-frequency heating,
and vitrification are technologies summarized under
thermal treatment. Table  1 provides a general  sum-
mary  of  the effectiveness  of the technologies for
various contaminant classes.

The principal  feature of many in situ treatment
technologies is delivery and recovery of fluids or
other reactants to the subsurface. The ability to con-
trol and monitor the delivery and recovery of these
fluids or reactants is central to the effectiveness of in
situ technologies  in treating the  contamination.
Depending on the subsurface conditions and con-
taminant characteristics, each in situ technology has
benefits and limitations on its ability to effectively
deliver, control, and recover administered fluids
and/or reactants and the contaminants. For example,
soil permeability is an  important factor in the de-
livery of a reactant for chemical oxidation or a gas
for bioventing, whereas it is not as important for
conductive heating. Consequently, the character-
ization of this parameter would  generally be more
critical for chemical oxidation or bioventing than for
conductive heating.

The increased use in recent years of several in situ
soil treatment technologies, such as chemical oxi-
dation and thermal treatment, has shown that both
technologies  are a viable option  for addressing
source zones contaminated by nonaqueous phase
liquids (NAPLs). In addition, greater emphasis  is
being placed on examining these technologies for
their potential synergies as treatment trains to ad-
dress  contamination in the subsurface. This inte-
grated approach has the potential for providing a
more effective site remediation.

For information on various in situ technologies:

Harzardous Waste Cleanup Information (CLU-IN)
website at: http://www.cluin.org/techfocus/

Federal Remediation  Technologies  Roundtable
(FRTR) website at: http://www.frtr.gov/

Naval Engineering  Facilities  Environmental Res-
toration & BRAC (NAVFAC) website at: http://
enviro .nfe sc .navy .mil/erb

3.1 Physical/Chemical Treatment Technologies

Physical/chemical technologies, which represent the
most diverse group of remediation technologies, in-
clude soil  vapor extraction, solidification/stabiliza-
tion, oxidation, soil flushing, and electrokinetic
separation.

3.1.1 Soil  Vapor Extraction

In situ soil vapor extraction (SVE) is a remediation
technology in which a vacuum is applied to induce
a controlled subsurface air flow to remove volatile
organic compounds (VOCs) and some semivolatile
organic compounds (SVOCs) from the vadose zone

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    Table 1. Summary of In Situ Treatment Technologies Applications for Contaminant Classes
Key: O Better ft Average • Worse
S=Specific to chemical type
Nonhalogenated VOCs
Halogenated VOCs
Nonhalogenated SVOCs
Halogenated SVOCs
w
"o5
3
PH
Inorganics
Radionuclides1
w

>
'v5
_o
"a
X
w
In Situ Physical/Chemical
Soil Vapor Extraction
Solidification/Stabilization
Chemical Oxidation
Soil Flushing
Electrokinetic Separation
O
•
»
O
»
O
•
»
O
»
•
»
•
»
»
•
»
»
»
»
O
•
•
»
•
•
0
S
o
0
•
0
•
•
»
•
•
»
•
•
In Situ Biological Treatment
Bioremediation
Bioventing
Phytoremediation
o
0
»
o
0
»
O
0
»
S
•
S
o
0
»
s
•
»
S
•
•
O
•
•
In Situ Thermal
Thermal Treatment (electrical resistivity heating, steam
injection and extraction, conductive heating, radiofrequency
heating, and in situ vitrification)
0
0
0
0
0
•
•
•
Adapted from Federal Remediation Technologies Roundtable Remediation Screening Matrix, Table 3.2.
http://www.frtr.gov/matrix2/section3/table3 2.html
'For more information on radionuclide technologies see: U.S. EPA. 1996. Technology Screening Guide for
Radioactively Contaminated Sites, EPA/402/R-96/017.
http://www.eDa. eov/superfund/resources/radiation/pdf/techguide.pdf

to the surface for treatment. The configuration of the
system usually involves attaching blowers to extrac-
tion wells  which  are generally constructed with
slotted polyvinyl chloride (PVC) to induce  airflow
through the soil matrix (Army Corps of Engineers
[USAGE] 2002). The contaminated air is brought to
the  surface  and passed through  a  vapor/liquid
separator to remove any  moisture before the air is
treated. Treatment is typically done by adsorption
(activated carbon), or for more concentrated waste
streams, by thermal oxidation systems (U.S. EPA
2006). The water generated by the liquid separator
may also require treatment (Figure 1). When expected
concentrations in the air stream are sufficiently high
(1,000 to 5,000 parts per million [ppm] or more) for
free product recovery for recycling, a stand alone
condensation treatment system might be considered.
This type  of system is generally  not used for
mixtures of  chemicals, and at some point the
condenser system will need to be changed out when
concentrations drop (USAGE 2002).

Concrete, asphalt, geomembrane, or other low-
permeability covers are  often placed over the soil
surface to prevent short-circuiting of air flow and to
increase the radius of influence  of the extraction
wells. Replacement air can be introduced into the
subsurface  by injecting  air  via a blower or by al-
lowing air to flow into passive injection  wells.
While vertical wells are the  most widely used SVE
design method, when the contamination and/or the
water table is shallow, horizontal wells or trenches
provide better lateral flow and superior formation
access.

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                                     Air Vent or
                                     Injection Well
                        Ground Surface
Extraction.
   Wei!
The SVE process is driven by the partitioning of
volatile materials from condensed phases (sorbed on
soil particles, dissolved in pore water, or nonaqueous
liquid) into the soil gas being drawn through the sub-
surface. The partitioning is controlled by contam-
inant and soil properties. These properties include
contaminant vapor pres-
sure, Henry's law con-
stant, solubility, soil in-
trinsic permeability, wa-
ter   content  (which
should be low, but very
dry  soils  also  inhibit
contaminant mobiliza-
tion), and  organic  car-
bon content (Air Force
Center   for  Environ-
mental   Excellence
[AFCEE]2002).SVEis
best  suited   in  well-
drained,   high-perme-
ability soil (sand  and
gravel) with a low or-
ganic  carbon  content.
Low permeability soil or
heterogenous  soil with
high carbon content are
more difficult to treat
with  SVE  and  often
require  amendments,
such as  pneumatic or
hydraulic   fracturing.1
Fracturing   allows  for
high  preferential  flow
paths, but the bulk of the
contaminant load still  depends upon low flow or
diffusion from the competent soil matrix.

Like  fracturing, heterogenous subsurfaces provide
differential flow paths that result in efficient removal
of contaminants in the permeable layers, with the less
permeable  layers being subject to slow diffusive
forces. Rate-limited diffusion in the less permeable
soils extends the  time  needed  for  remediation;
therefore, it may be more efficient to approach these
types of sites with a pulsed pumping strategy, in
which the blowers are turned off at predetermined
effluent concentrations, and the contaminants are
allowed to diffuse into the "clean" permeable layers.
                                                   After a suitable (site-specific) time, the blowers are
                                                   turned back on to capture the more concentrated soil
                                                   vapors (AFCEE 2002). If appropriate, this method
                                                   can save money on electricity and other costs. For
                                                   other examples of energy conservation, see Gill and
                                                   Mahutova(2004).
                                                                           Clean Air
                         Water Table  f
                Air Vent or
               Injection Well
                                                                  - Impermeable Cap
                                                               Contaminated
                                                               Vadose
                                                               Zone
                        Source: U.S. EPA 2006.
                        Figure 1. Typical Soil Vapor Extraction System
1 Fracturing is the creation of cracks or sand-filled fissures in
low- permeability formations.
         When designing an  SVE system, DiGiulio  and
         Varadhan (2001) advise care in choosing standard
         radius of influence (ROI) methods to place extrac-
         tion wells. These methods generally rely on mea-
         suring vacuum differentials with distance from the
         venting well. Vacuum measurements can indicate
         the direction of a flow gradient, but as the vacuum
         measured approaches ambient pressures, they may
         give a false indication and lead to placing wells too
         far apart. In addition, vacuum measurements give no
         information on the effective gas flow through the
         various subsurface materials. For example, one-di-
         mensional measurements made on layers of sand and
         silty clay will yield equivalent vacuums, while the
         effective gas flow is  through the sand, with little
         going through the silty clay. A more relevant ap-
         proach to well layout is to achieve a pore velocity

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that exceeds some minimum rate everywhere within
the contaminated zone (USAGE 2002).

As the vapor extraction system continues to operate,
effluent contaminant concentrations generally be-
come asymptotic (steady-state removal of very low
concentrations). Unless the SVE system is addressing
a single contaminant species, measurements of the
venting effluent should provide the total mass being
removed as well as  relative compound concen-
trations. Speciation data also help in evaluating the
system's efficiency. Because the chemicals in a mix-
ture have different chemical/physical properties, they
will leave the mixture at different rates; hence, a drop
in total concentration  does not necessarily mean a
drop in available contaminant or system efficiency,
but rather exhaustion  of  certain species. It is  also
important to test each  extraction well in the system
individually to  determine if the drop is occurring
across all wells (USAGE 2002). Testing of the header
alone may mask wells that have  low flow and high
concentrations that are being diluted by other wells in
the system.

Maintaining asymptotic levels over a period of many
months is  often interpreted as a sign that the SVE
effort has been successful and should be shut down;
however, as USAGE  (2002) states: "although the
decrease of concentrations in the extracted vapor is an
indication  of the effectiveness of the system,  it  is
certainly not conclusive evidence that the concen-
trations in the soil have decreased proportionally."

Reasons for a decrease in contaminant concentration,
other than reaching cleanup goals, include:

•   The system has exhausted the supply of contam-
    inants  that it can  advectively reach, and their
    continued presence, at very low concentrations,
    represents a draw upon  diffusion rate-limited
    source areas.
•   The water table has risen and the source areas are
    no longer available to the SVE system.
    The soil has reached a dryness factor that hinders,
    rather than promotes,  SVE.
•   The measured flow represents dilution from fully
    flushed  areas near the extraction well, while
    understating considerably more  contaminated
    areas  further away,  near  stagnation  points
    (AFCEE 2002 and DiGiulio and Varadhan 2001).
If no rebound is found after shutting the system
down for a  site-specific  determined time,  then
confirmation  sampling  should be  done.  Confir-
mation  sampling  can  be  accomplished with an
extensive soil gas survey, continuous soil sampling
on a statistically determined grid, or professional
judgment with sufficient previous characterization
information gained by use of direct push tools, such
as the membrane interface probe or, in the presence
of hydrocarbons, by laser-induced  fluorescence
spectroscopy.

If a site has contaminated groundwater, it should be
addressed along with the  vadose zone contami-
nation.  Often this  can be  accomplished using  a
multi-phase extraction  (MPE) system to simulta-
neously remove contaminants from soil and extract
contaminated groundwater. A discussion of MPE,
which is not within the scope of this document, can
be found in U.S. EPA (1999) and  USAGE (1999).

The cost of SVE is site-specific and depends in part
on the hydrogeology, type and amount of contami-
nants, and whether the offgas requires treatment.
The FRTR website estimates the cost is between $ 10
and $40 per cubic yard, with a typical pilot program
costing  between  $10,000  and $40,000.  The
NAVFAC website provides a $20 to  $60 per cubic
yard estimate. USAGE (2002) provides a strategy
for estimating costs  and a checklist for items to
include  in the estimate. SVE is a mature, widely
used technology, and many vendors are capable of
implementing the technology.

Cited and Other References

AFCEE. 2000. Source  Reduction Effectiveness at
Fuel-Contaminated Sites: Technical Summary Re-
port.  125 pp.  http://www.afcee.brooks.af.mil/pro
ducts/techtrans/download/SourceRed.pdf

American Academy  of Environmental Engineers.
1998. Innovative Site  Remediation Technology
Design  & Application, Volume  7:  Vacuum Ex-
traction and Air Sparging, EPA 542/B-97/010. U.S.
EPA, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Re-
sponse,  392 pp. http://nepis.epa.gov/pubtitleOSW
ER.htm

DiGiulio, D. and R. Varadhan. 2001. Development
of Recommendations  and Methods  to Support
Assessment  of Soil  Venting Performance and
Closure, EPA 600/R-01/070. U.S. EPA Office of

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Research and Development, 435 pp. http://www.epa.
gov/ada/pubs/reports .html

FRTR website at: http://www.frtr.gov/

Gill, M. and K. Mahutova. 2004. Engineering Forum
Issue Paper: Introduction to Energy Conservation and
Production at Waste  Cleanup  Sites,  EPA  542/
S-04/001.  U.S. EPA, Office  of Solid Waste and
Emergency Response, 36 pp.  http://www.epa.gov/
tio/tsp/download/epa542s04001 .pdf

Johnson, R., R.  Dupont, and  D.  Graves.  1996.
Assessing  UST  Corrective Action  Technologies:
Diagnostic Evaluation of In Situ SVE-Based System
Performance, EPA 600/R-96/041. U.S. EPA, Office
of Research and Development, 162pp. http://nepis.
epa.gov/pubtitleORD.htm

NAVFAC.  2006.  Naval Engineering  Facilities
Environmental  Restoration  &  BRAC  website.
https://portal.navfac.navv.mil/portal/page?_pageid=
181.5346904& dad=portal& schema=PORTAL

USAGE. 1999. Engineering and Design: Multi-Phase
Extraction, EM 1110-1-4010, 286 pp. http://www.
usace.army.mil/publications/eng-manuals/eml 110-
1-4010/toc.htm
USAGE. 2002. Engineering and Design: Soil Vapor
Extraction and Bioventing, EM 1110-1 -4001,424 pp.
http://www.usace.armv.mil/inet/usace-docs/eng-
manuals/eml 110-1-4001/toc.htm

USAGE. 2006. Army Corps of Engineers Environ-
mental webpage.  http://www.environmental .usace.
army.mil/

U.S. EPA. 1997a. Analysis of Selected Enhance-
ments for Soil Vapor Extraction, EPA 542/R-97/007.
Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, 246
pp.   http ://www. cluin. org/download/remed/sveen
hmt.pdf

U.S. EPA. 1997b. Michigan Soil Vapor Extraction
Remediation (MISER) Model: A Computer Program
to Model Soil Vapor Extraction and Bioventing of
Organic  Chemicals  in  Unsaturated  Geological
Material, EPA 600/R-97/099. Office of Research and
Development, 260 pp. http://nepis.epa.gov/pubtitle
ORD.htm
U.S. EPA. 1999. Multi-Phase Extraction: State-of-
the-Practice, EPA 542/R-99/004. Office of Solid
Waste  and Emergency Response, 78 pp.  http://
www.epa.gov/tio/download/remed/mpe2.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2006. Off-Gas Treatment for Soil Vapor
Extraction  Systems:  State of the Practice, EPA
542/R-05/028.  Office  of  Solid  Waste  and
Emergency Response, 129 pp.  http://www.cluin.
org/download/remed/EPA542R05028.pdf

3.1.2 Solidification/Stabilization

Solidification and stabilization (S/S) refer to closely
related  technologies  that use  chemical  and/or
physical processes to treat radioactive, hazardous,
and mixed wastes.  Solidification technologies en-
capsulate the waste to form a solid material. The
product of solidification may be a monolithic block,
a clay-like material, a granular particulate, or some
other physical form commonly considered "solid."

Stabilization technologies reduce the hazard poten-
tial of a waste by converting the contaminants into
less soluble, mobile, or toxic forms (e.g., Cr(VI) to
Cr(III)). The  physical nature  and handling char-
acteristics of the waste are not necessarily changed
by stabilization.

Chemical  stabilization relies on the reduction of
contaminant mobility by physical or chemical reac-
tions with the contaminant, rather than the contam-
inant matrix (e.g., soil or sediment), as is done with
solidification. The mobility of organic and inorganic
compounds can be reduced through various precipi-
tation,   complexation,  and  adsorption  reactions.
Commonly applied  inorganic  stabilization agents
include soluble silicates, carbon, phosphates (e.g.,
apatite), and  sulfur-based binders. Organo-clays
have been used to stabilize organic chemicals that
are poorly addressed by precipitation and complex-
ation reactions (U.S. EPA 1997).

The  S/S process can be accomplished using either
inorganic or polymer binders. The most common
inorganic binders are Portland cement,  pozzolans
(siliceous or aluminous materials that can react with
calcium hydroxide to form compounds with cemen-
titious  properties), and cement/pozzolan mixtures.
While  these binders are effective for a range of
inorganic  cations and anions, a treatability  study

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should be conducted using on-site soil, contami-
nants, and groundwater (if applicable).

In situ chemical  stabilization of inorganics using
phosphorus  based   and other  compounds   was
evaluated in September 1998 under EPA's Superfund
Innovative Technology Evaluation Program (SITE).
The  Soil Rescue and Envirobond™ remediation
products   were applied to a small  area  of  lead-
contaminated soil at the Crooksville/Roseville Pottery
site in southeastern Ohio. These products chelate the
metal ions to reduce mobility. The mean  Toxicity
Characteristic  Leaching  Procedure  (TCLP)   lead
concentrations were reduced by more than 99 percent
for both products (U.S. EPA 2002 and 2003).

S/S  treatment  of  organic   contaminants  with
cementitious  formulations  is more complex than
treatment of inorganic contaminants.  While  low
levels of organic contaminants can
be treated using S/S, many organics
will  interfere with  the hydration
process and impede the curing of
the  solid  (U.S.  EPA   1997).
Subsurface variations in the  con-
centrations of organics can affect
both  the leachability and  final
physical  properties  of the treated
wastes or soil.  Thorburg  et al.
(2005) used  Portland cement to
treat a sediment contaminated with
coal tar-derived hydrocarbons. The
results showed  that the  treated
sediments leached polycyclic aro-
matic hydrocarbons (PAHs)  and
midrange aromatic  and aliphatic
hydrocarbons  at  concentrations
well above  their effective solu-
bilities.  Most cementitious  pro-
cesses are exothermic, and the heat
generated by the curing process has the potential to
volatilize VOCs.

The most significant challenge in applying S/S in situ
for contaminated  soils is achieving  complete and
uniform mixing of the binder with the contaminated
matrix. Three basic approaches are used for mixing
the binder with the matrix:

    •   Vertical auger mixing
    •   Shallow in-place mixing
       Injection grouting
                 Vertical auger mixing requires a system of augers to
                 inject and mix binder into the soil (Figure 2). The
                 treatment depth is limited by the torque required to
                 turn the auger. Current testing indicates a limit of
                 depths to less than 150 feet. The  auger  diameter,
                 which determines the number of holes that need to
                 be drilled for a given areal extent, can range from
                 several meters for shallow mixing to much smaller
                 diameters for deep mixing. The  need for a smaller
                 diameter auger means more holes will need to be
                 drilled per unit area, which increases the cost for the
                 deeper mixing. If VOCs or mercury are present at
                 the site, the contaminant vapors should be captured
                 and treated. The capture  is usually  accomplished
                 with a hood that covers the mixing area and conveys
                 the gases to an  on-site treatment system. Auger
                 mixing is the most commonly applied method for in
                 situ mixing of S/S reagents with  soil.
     Source: U.S. EPA 1997
Figure 2. MecTool™ for Solidification and Stabilization of
Contaminated Soils and Sludges
                 In-place mixing involves the spreading and mixing
                 of binder reagents with waste by conventional earth-
                 moving equipment, such as draglines, backhoes, or
                 clamshell buckets. A large  auger rig can also be
                 employed for in-place mixing. The technology is
                 applicable only to surface or shallow  deposits of
                 contamination.

                 A novel form of in-place waste mixing can be used
                 for large areas of heavy-metals contaminated soil. A
                 lime-stabilized  biosolid  can be  plowed into the
                 contaminated soil, yielding  a mixture that reduces
                 toxicity and bioavailability of the heavy metals

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while  providing  a soil  suitable  for  supporting
vegetation.

Injection grouting involves forcing a binder con-
taining dissolved or suspended treatment agents into
the formation under pressure, thereby permeating the
soil. Grout injection may be applied to contaminated
formations lying well below the ground surface. The
injected grout  cures in place, producing an in situ
treated mass.

Polymer binders are thermoplastic or thermosetting.
Thermoplastic  binders are materials that can be re-
peatedly melted to a flow state and will harden when
cooled. Polyethylene,  sulfur polymer, and bitumen
are examples  of theromoplastic  binders. Thermo-
setting binders  are materials that require the combin-
ation of several liquid ingredients (e.g., monomer,
catalyst, promoter) that, when combined, harden to a
solid that cannot be reworked (U.S. EPA 1997).

Thermoplastic  binders operate in a temperature range
of 120 to 180°C, which could be an issue  in soil with
high moisture content. Thermosetting binders operate
at ambient temperatures, but they are not amenable to
high moisture  content. While polymer binders are
effective, they  may be difficult to use in an in situ
setting.

S/S has been applied to the remediation of hazardous
waste sites for  more than 15 years. Experience with
the technology,  especially  the inorganic  binders
(Portland cement and pozzolans),  is abundant.

The Army Environmental Policy Institute (1998)
estimates that  in situ  S/S of metals using  a phos-
phoric apatite binder costs approximately $46 per ton;
using Portland cement for metals costs about $125
per ton; using ammonium modified Portland cement
for organics costs about $101 per ton; and using
polyethylene costs about $609 per ton. The Portland
Cement  Association  also  has  costing  data:
http://www.cement.org/.

Cited and Other References

Army   Environmental  Policy  Institute.   1998.
Solidification Technologies for Restoration  of Sites
Contaminated  with  Hazardous  Wastes,  80  pp.
http ://www.aepi .army .mil/pubs-cleanup .html

Maher,  A., H.  Najm,  and M. Boile.  2005. Solidi-
fication/Stabilization of Soft River Sediments Using
Deep Soil Mixing. State of New Jersey Department
of Transportation, 44  pp.  http://www.state.nj .us/
transportation/works/maritime/documents/deep
soilmixingfinal .pdf

Portland  Cement Association.  2006 (November).
Portland Cement Association webpage. http://www.
cement.org/waste/wt tech epapubs.asp

Thornburg, T. et al. 2005. Effectiveness of in situ
cement stabilization for remediation  of sediment
containing coal tar derived hydrocarbons. The An-
nual International  Conference on Contaminated
Soils, Sediments, and Water, October 17-20, 2005,
University of Massachusetts, Amherst.  http://www.
umasssoils.com/abstracts2005/Thursdav/evolving
%20strategies.htm

USAGE.  2006. Unified Facilities Guide Specifica-
tions: Section 02 55 00, Solidification/Stabilization
(S/S) of Contaminated Material, UFGS-02 55 00,16
pp. http://www.wbdg.org/ccb/DOD/UFGS/UFGS%
2002%2055%2000.pdf

U.S. EPA. 1993a. Engineering Bulletin: Solidi-
fication/Stabilization of Organics  and Inorganics,
EPA 540/S-92/015. Office of Emergency and Reme-
dial Response, 13pp. http://www.cement.org/waste
/wt tech  epapubs. asp

U.S. EPA.  1993b. Technical Resource Document:
Solidification/Stabilization and Its Application to
Waste Materials,  EPA 530/R-93/012. Office of
Research and Development, 372 pp.  http://www.
cement.org/waste/wt tech epapubs.asp

U.S. EPA.  1996. Technology Screening Guide for
Radioactively Contaminated Sites, EPA 402/R-96
/017. Office of Radiation and Office of Solid Waste
and Emergency Response, 203 pp. http://www.epa.
gov/superfund/resources/radiation/pdf/techguide.pdf
U.S. EPA.  1997.  Innovative  Site  Remediation
Design and Application, Volume 4:  Stabilization/
Solidification, EPA 542/B-97/007. Office of Solid
Waste   and  Emergency   Response,  234  pp.
http: //nepis. epa. gov/pubtitle O SWER.htm

U.S.  EPA.   1998.  MOLECULAR  BONDING
SYSTEM® Innovative Technology Evaluation Re-
port, EPA 540/R-97/507. Office of Research and
Development,  56 pp.   http://www.epa.gov/ORD/
SITE/reports/540r97507/540r97507.pdf

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U.S. EPA.  1999.  Solidification/Stabilization  Re-
source Guide, EPA 542/B-99/002. Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response, 91 pp. http://www.
clu-in.org/download/remed/solidstab.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2000. Solidification/Stabilization Use at
Superfund Sites, EPA 542/R-00/010. Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response, 24 pp. http://www.
clu-in.org/s.focus/c/pub/i/611/

U.S. EPA. 2002. Superfund Innovative Technology
Evaluation Program: Evaluation of Soil Amendment
Technologies at the  Crooksville/Roseville Pottery
Area of Concern, Rocky Mountain Remediation Ser-
vices Envirobond™ Process. Office of Research and
Development, 16  pp.   http://www.epa.gov/ORD/
NRMRL/pubs/540r02501/540R02501.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2003. Evaluation  of Soil  Amendment
Technologies at the  Crooksville/Roseville Pottery
Area of Concern  STAR Organics  Soil Rescue:
Innovative  Technology  Evaluation Report, EPA
540/R-99/501. Office of Research and Development,
14 pp. http://www.epa.gov/ORD/SITE/reports/540
r99501/540R9950 lprel.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2004. Innovative Technology Evaluation
Report: Stabilization of Mercury in Waste Material
from the  Sulfur Bank Mercury  Mine.  Office of
Research and Development, 68 pp.  http://www.epa.
gov/ORD/NRMRL/pubs/540r04502/540r04502.pdf

3.1.3 Chemical Oxidation

Chemical  oxidation typically  involves reduction/
oxidation (redox) reactions that chemically convert
hazardous contaminants to nonhazardous or less toxic
compounds that are more stable, less mobile, or inert.
Redox reactions involve the transfer of electrons from
one chemical to another. Specifically, one reactant is
oxidized (loses electrons) and  one is reduced (gains
electrons). There are  several  oxidants capable of
degrading contaminants. Commonly used oxidants
include potassium or sodium permanganate, Fenton' s
catalyzed  hydrogen peroxide,  hydrogen peroxide,
ozone, and sodium  persulfate.  Each oxidant  has
advantages and limitations, and while applicable to
soil   contamination  and  some  source  zone
contamination,  they  have been  applied primarily
toward  remediating  groundwater.  Several   key
concepts in oxidant selection for site cleanup include:
•   Is the oxidant capable of degrading the contam-
    inant of concern? Is a catalyst or other additive
    required to increase effectiveness?

•   What is the soil oxidant demand (SOD)? SOD is
    a measure of how the naturally occurring ma-
    terials in soil will affect the  performance of
    some of the oxidants. For non-selective oxi-
    dants, high SOD will increase the cost of clean-
    up, as more oxidant will be required.

•   What is the naturally occurring pH of the soil/
    groundwater system? Some oxidants require an
    acidic environment to work. If the soil is basic,
    an acid needs to be  applied in addition to the
    oxidant.

•   How will the decomposition rate of the oxidant
    affect application strategies? Some unreacted
    oxidants  may  remain in the  subsurface  for
    weeks to months, while others naturally decom-
    pose within hours of injection.

The type of delivery system selected depends upon
the depth of the contaminants, the physical state of
the oxidant (gas,  liquid,  solid),  and its decom-
position rate. Backhoes, trenchers,  and augers have
been used to work liquid and solid oxidants into
contaminated soil and  sludge. Liquids can  be
delivered either by gravity through wells  and
trenches or by injection. For vadose zones, gravity
has the drawback of a  relatively small area of
influence. Pressurized injection of liquids or gases,
either through the screen of a well or the probe of a
direct push  (DP) rig, will force the oxidant into the
formation. The DP rig offers a cost-effective way of
delivering the oxidant, and if needed, the hole can be
completed  as a  small  diameter  well  for later
injections. Potassium permanganate and other solid
phase chemical  oxidants have also been  added by
hydraulic or pneumatic fracturing.

The site stratigraphy plays an important role in the
distribution of oxidants. Fine-grained units redirect
oxidants to more permeable areas and are difficult to
penetrate; hence, they can be the source of rebound
later on, as  contaminants diffuse  out. Long-lived
oxidants (e.g., permanganate) have the potential to
remain active as this diffusion occurs, and they can
mitigate some of the potential rebound.

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Chemical oxidation usually requires multiple appli-
cations. Table 2 provides a qualitative list of oxidant
reactivities with contaminants commonly found at
sites.

In the special case of nonaqueous phase liquids,
oxidants that are in a water-based solution will only
be able to react with the dissolved phase of the con-
taminant, since the two will not mix. This property
limits their activity to the  oxidant solution/NAPL
interface.

Cost estimates depend on the heterogeneity of the site
subsurface, soil oxidation demand, stability  of the
oxidant,  and   type   and  concentration  of  the
contaminant. Care should be taken when comparing
different technologies  on a cubic yard basis without
considering these site attributes. Cost data can be
found in ITRC (2005) and Brown (2003). In  situ
chemical oxidation has been used at a number of sites
and is available from a variety of vendors.

Sodium or Potassium Permanganate. Permanganate
is a non-specific oxidizer of contaminants with low
standard oxidation potential and high SOD. It can be
used over a wide range of pH values and does not
require a catalyst. Permanganate tends to remain in
the subsurface for a long time, allowing for more
contaminant contact and  the potential of reducing
rebound.  As  permanganate  oxidizes  organic
materials, manganese oxide (MnO2) forms as a dark
brown to black precipitate. During the treatment of
large bodies of NAPL with high concentrations of
permanganate, this precipitate may form a coating
that reduces contact between oxidant and NAPL.
The  extent  to which  this  reduction  negatively
impacts  contaminant  oxidation  has  not been
quantified.  Potassium permanganate has a much
lower  solubility than  sodium  and is  generally
applied at lower concentrations. Commercial-grade
permanganates may contain elevated concentrations
of heavy metals, and they may lower the pH of the
treated zone (U.S. EPA 2004). If bioremediation is
planned as a polishing step, permanganate will have
an adverse effect on microbial activity and may
cause a change in microbe distribution. This effect
is generally transitory. Also, there is some evidence
that permanganates may be inhibitory to Dehalococ-
coides ethenogenes,  the microbial species  that
completely dechlorinates tetrachloroethene (PCE)
and trichloroethene (TCE) (Hrapovic et al. 2005).

Fenton's Catalyzed Hydrogen Peroxide. Fenton's
reagent uses hydrogen peroxide in the presence of
ferrous sulfate to generate hydroxyl radicals that are
powerful oxidants. The reaction is fast, releases
oxygen and heat, and can be difficult to control.
Because  of the fast reaction, the area of influence
around the injection point is small. In conventional
         Table 2. Reactivity of Oxidants with Commonly Found Contaminants1
Oxidant
Ozone
Hydrogen Peroxide2
Calcium Peroxide
Fenton's Reagent
Potassium/Sodium
Permanganate
Sodium Persulfate
(Iron)
Sodium Persulfate
(Heat)
High
PCE, TCE, DCE, VC, MTBE,
CB, PAHs, Phenols, Explosives,
PCBs, Pesticides
PCE, TCE, DCE, VC, CB,
BTEX, MTBE, Phenols
PCE, TCE, DCE, VC, CB
PCE, TCE, DCE, VC, CB,
BTEX, MTBE, Phenols
PCE, TCE, DCE, VC, TEX,
PAHs, Phenols, Explosives
PCE, TCE, DCE, VC, CB,
BTEX, Phenols
All CVOCs, BTEX, MTBE,
PAHs, Phenols, Explosives,
PCBs, Pesticides
Moderate
BTEX, CH2C12,
DCA, CH2C12, PAHs,
Explosives
DCA, CH,C1,
DCA, CH2C12, PAHs,
Explosives
Pesticides
DCA, CH2C12, CHC13,
PAHs, Explosives,
Pesticides

Low
CT, CHC13,
TCA, CT, CHC13,
PCBs, Pesticides
CT, CHC1,
TCA, CT, CHC13,
PCBs, Pesticides
Benzene, DCA,
CH2C12, TCA, CT, CB,
CHC1,, PCBs
TCA, CT, PCBs

Source: ITRC 2005 and Brown 2003
1 Contaminant names are spelled out in the abbreviations and acronyms list in Section 5.0.
2 Peroxide without a catalyst must be applied at higher concentrations, which are inherently hazardous, and the reactions are
                                               10

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application, the reaction needs to take place  in an
acidified environment, which generally requires the
injection of an acid to lowerthe treatment zone pHto
between three and five. The reaction oxidizes the
ferrous iron to ferric iron and causes it to precipitate,
which can result in a loss of permeability in the soil
near the injection point. Overtime, the depletion of
the ferrous ion can be rate limiting for the process.
Chelated iron can be used to preserve the iron in its
ferrous state at neutral pH, thus eliminating the acid
requirement. The byproducts of the reaction are rela-
tively benign, and the heat of the reaction may cause
favorable desorption or dissolution of contaminants
and their subsequent destruction. It also may  cause
the movement of contaminants away from the treat-
ment zone or allow them to  escape to the atmo-
sphere.  There are safety  concerns with handling
Fenton's reagent on the surface, and the potential
exists for violent reactions in the subsurface. In many
cases there may be sufficient iron or other transition
metals in the subsurface to eliminate the need to add
ferrous sulfate.

Hydrogen Peroxide. While catalysts can be added to
increase oxidation potential, hydrogen peroxide can
be used alone to oxidize contaminants. Peroxide
oxidation is an exothermic reaction that can generate
sufficient heat to boil water. The generation of heat
can assist in making contaminants more available for
degradation as well as allowing them to escape to the
surface. With its high reaction and decomposition
rates, hydrogen  peroxide  is not likely to  address
contaminants found in low permeability soil.  Solid
peroxides (e.g.,  calcium peroxide) in  slurry form
moderate  the rate  of  dissolution and peroxide
generation,  thereby  allowing  a  more  uniform
distribution.

Ozone. Ozone, which is one of the stronger oxidants,
can be applied as a gas  or dissolved in water.  As a
gas,  ozone can  directly degrade  a  number of
chemicals in both the dissolved and pure forms, and
it  provides  an  oxygen-rich  environment for
contaminants that degrade under aerobic conditions.
It  also degrades in water to form radical species,
which are highly reactive and non-specific. Ozone
may  require longer injection  times  than  other
oxidants, and vapor control equipment may be needed
at  the surface. Because of its reactivity, ozone may
not be  appropriate  for slow diffusion into  low-
permeability soil.
Sodium Persulfate. Persulfate (S2O8~2) is a strong
oxidant with  a higher oxidation potential than
hydrogen peroxide and a potentially lower SOD than
permanganate or peroxide. Persulfate  reaction is
slow unless placed in the presence of a catalyst, such
as ferrous iron, or heated to  produce sulfate free
radicals (*SO4~) that are highly reactive and capable
of  degrading  many  organic  compounds.  At
temperatures  above  40°C,  persulfate becomes
especially reactive and can degrade most organics
(Block  et al.  2004).  Like Fenton's reagent,  the
ferrous iron catalyst (when used) will degrade with
time and precipitate.

Cited and Other References

Block, P., R. Brown, and D. Robinson. 2004. Novel
activation technologies for sodium persulfate in situ
chemical oxidation. Proceedings of the Fourth Inter-
national Conference on the Remediation of Chlorin-
ated and Recalcitrant Compounds, Monterey, CA.
http://www.geo-log.de/uploads/media/novel
persulfate activation technologies.pdf

Brown,  R.  2003.  In situ  chemical  oxidation:
performance, practice, and pitfalls. 2003 AFCEE
Technology Transfer Workshop, February 25,2003,
San Antonio, TX. http: //www .cluin. org/download/
techfocus/chemox/4 brown.pdf

Haselow, J., P. Block, and F. Sessa. 2006. Pilot scale
application of heat-activated persulfate  at a former
petroleum underground storage tank area. The 22nd
International Conference  on Soils, Sediments, and
Water, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA,
October 16-19, 2006.

Hrapovic, L. et al. 2005. Laboratory study of treat-
ment of trichloroethene by chemical oxidation fol-
lowed by bioremediation. Environ. Sci. Technol.
39(8): 2888-2897.

Ruling, S. and B. Pivetz.  2006. Engineering Issue:
In Situ  Chemical Oxidation,  EPA 600/R-06/072.
U.S. EPA, Office of Research  and Development, 60
pp. http://www.epa.gov/ada/topics/oxidation  issue.
html

ITRC. 2005. Technical and Regulatory Guidance for
In Situ Chemical Oxidation of Contaminated Soil
and Groundwater, 2ndEdition. 172 p. http://www.itrc
web .org/Documents/ISCO-2 .pdf
                                                11

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NAVFAC. October 2006. In Situ Chemical Oxidation
Multi-mediaTraining Tool, http://www.ert2.org/ert2
portal/DesktopDefault.aspx

U.S.  EPA.  2004.  How to  Evaluate  Alternative
Cleanup Technologies for Underground Storage Tank
Sites: A Guide for Corrective Action Plan Reviewers,
EPA 510/R-04/002. Office of Underground Storage
Tanks,  http://epa.gov/oust/pubs/tum chl3.pdf

3.1.4 Soil Flushing

Soil flushing involves  flooding a zone of contam-
ination with an appropriate solution to remove the
contaminant from the soil. Water or liquid solution is
injected or infiltrated into the area of contamination.
The contaminants are mobilized by solubilization,
formation of emulsions, or a chemical reaction with
the flushing  solutions.  After passing through  the
contamination zone, the contaminant-bearing fluid is
collected  and brought  to the surface for disposal,
recirculation, or on-site treatment and reinjection.
Application of soil  flushing relies on the ability to
deliver, control the flow, and recover the flushing
fluid.

Flushing  solutions  may be water,  acidic aqueous
solutions, basic solutions, chelating or  complexing
agents, reducing agents, cosolvents, or surfactants.
Water will extract  water-soluble (hydrophilic) or
water-mobile constituents. Acidic solutions may be
used to remove metals or basic  organic materials.
Basic solutions may be used for some metals, such as
zinc,  tin, or  lead,  and some phenols.  Chelating,
complexing,  and reducing  agents may be  used to
recover some  metals. Cosolvents are usually miscible
and are effective for some organics. Surfactants can
assist in the removal of hydrophobic organics (U.S.
EPA 1991).

The techniques employed the most in soil flushing are
surfactant and  cosolvent flooding for fuels and
chlorinated  solvents. There  are many  types of
surfactants (cationic, anionic, nonionic), and while
adjustments can be  made in the fluid composition,
anionic or nonionic surfactants are  generally used.
This is  because their negative  or neutral charge
reduces the possibility of their sorption to negatively
charged clay  particles. They also are generally less
toxic than cationic surfactants.
Surfactants are commonly constructed with hydro-
phobic  and  hydrophilic  chemical  components,
meaning that one end of the molecule is attracted to
oil (or organic compounds) and the other to water.
Surfactants  chosen  primarily  to  increase  the
contaminant (generally a NAPL) solubility are used
in a  solubilization flood. Surfactants chosen to
produce ultra-low interfacial tensions are employed
in a mobilization flood (Kueperetal.  1997). Mobili-
zation flooding should only  be considered  when
there  is a high degree of certainty that the solution
can be recovered, such as with a competent bedrock
or capillary barrier underlying the treatment zone.

A typical surfactant solution  also may  contain
additives,  such as  electrolytes and a cosolvent. In
addition to being effective with the target contam-
inant, the  surfactant  solution  also should be com-
patible with the site-specific soil, soil pore water,
and groundwater (if applicable). A cosolvent, such
as isopropanol, can be used to improve the surfactant
solubility  in solution and provide the surfactant/
contaminant solution with an acceptable viscosity. A
side effect of adding chemicals to  the  surfactant
solution is that they need to be treated along with the
contaminant at the recovery end (NAVFAC 2002).

Cosolvents,  usually  alcohols, are chemicals that
dissolve in both water and NAPL.  In an  alcohol
flood, the alcohol may partition into both the NAPL
and water phases. Partitioning affects the viscosity,
density, solubility, and interfacial tension of the
NAPL (Kueper et al. 1997). The physical properties
of the NAPL vary with the amount of alcohol avail-
able  for  interaction,  and whether  the  alcohol
preferentially dissolves into the NAPL or into the
water. Complete miscibility is achievable and results
in a pumpable solution that,  depending upon the
density of the NAPL and the proportions of alcohol
and water in the solution, may be more or less dense
than water.

Before implementing surfactant and/or cosolvent
flushing,  laboratory and  bench-scale treatability
testing should be done to ensure the selection of an
agent(s) best suited for the contaminant and the site-
specific soil and geochemical conditions. Modeling
of subsurface conditions  is  commonly done to
ensure the best delivery system. Flushing  is most
efficient in relatively homogeneous and permeable
(K >  10-3 cm/sec) soil (NAVFAC 2002). Heteroge-
neous soil reduces the efficiency of the flood sweep
and may  prevent  optimum  contact between  the
                                                12

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agent(s) and the  target contaminant. Flushing of
relatively homogeneous but lower permeability (10~4
to 10"5 cm/sec) units is possible, but it requires a high-
induced gradient to move the agent, while greatly
increasing the remediation time (NAVFAC 2002).
Other soil factors that may adversely affect efficiency
are  high cation exchange capacity, high buffering
capacity, high organic soil content, and pH.

Land disposal restrictions and underground injection
control regulations also  may limit selection of the
flushing solution. At a former drycleaner, ethanol was
substituted for  isopropanol because of regulatory
concern about the  toxicity  and  persistence of
isopropanol. Most states allow in situ flushing of
saturated or unsaturated soil, with a permit, if the
aquifer in the area is already contaminated. When
applying for a  permit,  all  chemicals  involved, in-
cluding unreacted compounds and impurities, must be
listed (NAVFAC 2002).

An example of an alcohol flood to address PCE con-
tamination was carried out at the former Sage's Dry
Cleaners in Jacksonville, FL. The depth to ground-
water at the site was eight feet with the treatment
zone consisting of a24-ftby 9-ft elliptical source area
at 26 to 31  ft below ground surface  (bgs). About
9,000 gallons of a 95 percent ethanol/5 percent water
solution  were  injected into  the  target  zone.
Approximately  160,000 gallons of a ternary mixture
of PCE/ethanol/water were treated on site to remove
the PCE. The ethanol/water solution was disposed of
offsite.  Forty-two  liters of PCE were  recovered,
which represented approximately 63 percent of the
estimated   volume   (Florida  Department  of
Environmental  Protection  1998). Ethanol  had an
advantage in that  it could be left in the ground at
elevated  levels while  other  alcohols,  such as
isopropanol, would have had to be contained due to
their toxicity. The residual ethanol formed an organic
substrate  that  promoted   subsequent   microbial
reductive dechlorination of the remaining PCE. The
authors of the study noted that overall cost could have
been lowered had they  recovered the ethanol and
recycled it (Florida Department of Environmental
Protection 1998).

Due to its use in oil field applications, soil flushing is
considered a mature technology; however, it has
found limited application in the environmental arena.
ITRC (2003) estimates the  cost of surfactant/cosol-
vent flushing of a DNAPL source zone to range
between $65 and $200 per cubic yard. Cost estimates
of $100 to $300 per cubic yard for flushing are
given on the NAVFAC website.  The variability
stems from the waste type and the quantity to be
treated. The NAVFAC figures do not include design
and engineering costs, which can be considerable.
Cost per cubic yard can be misleading, and the cost
per gallon recovered or destroyed should also be
evaluated.

Cited and Other References

Florida Department of Environmental Protection.
1998. Cosolvent Flushing Pilot Test Report, Former
Sage's Dry Cleaner, 58 pp.  http://clu-in.org/down
load/remed/sages.pdf

ITRC. 2003. Technical and Regulatory Guidance for
Surfactant/Cosolvent Flushing of DNAPL  Source
Zones. 140 pp.  http://www.itrcweb.org/gd_DNA
PLs.asp

Kueper, B. et al. 1997. Technology Practices Man-
ual for Surfactants and Cosolvents (TR-97-2). Ad-
vanced Applied Technology Demonstration Facility
Program, Rice  University,  http://www.cluin.org/
PRODUCTS/AATDF/Toc .htm

NAVFAC.  2006.  Naval  Engineering Facilities
Environmental  Restoration  &  BRAC  website.
https://portal.navfac.naw.mil/portal/page?_pageid=
181.5346904&  dad=portal& schema=PORTAL

NAVFAC. 2002. Surfactant-Enhanced Aquifer Re-
mediation (SEAR) Design Manual, NFESC Tech-
nical Report TR-2206-ENV, 110 pp. http://enviro.
nfesc.navv.mil/erb/erb a/restoration/technologies/
remed/phys chem/sear/tr-2206-sear.pdf

NAVFAC. 2003. Surfactant-Enhanced Aquifer Re-
mediation (SEAR) Implementation Manual, NFESC
Technical Report TR-2219-ENV, 54 pp.  http://
enviro.nfesc.navv.mil/erb/erb  a/restoration/
technologies/remed/phys chem/sear/tr-2219-
sear.pdf

U.S. EPA. 1991. Engineering Bulletin: In Situ Soil
Flushing, EPA  540/2-91/021. Office of Research
and Development, 7 pp. http://nepis.epa.gov/pubtitle
OSWER.htm

U.S. EPA.  1996.  Environmental Research Brief:
Surfactant-Enhanced DNAPL Remediation:  Sur-
                                               13

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factant Selection, Hydraulic Efficiency, and Econ-
omic Factors, EPA 600/S-96/002. Office of Research
and Development, 15 pp. http://nepis.epa.gov/pub
titleORD.htm

3.1.5 Electrokinetic Separation

Electrokinetic separation is an emerging technology
that relies on the application of a low-intensity, direct
current through the soil to separate and extract heavy
metals, radionuclides, and organic contaminants from
unsaturated soil, sludge, and sediment. The current is
applied across electrode pairs that have been implan-
ted in the ground on each side of the contaminated
soil  mass.  During  electromigration,  positively
charged chemical species, such as metals, ammonium
ions, and some organic compounds, move toward the
cathode,  and negatively  charged chemicals, such as
chloride, cyanide, fluoride, nitrate, and negatively-
charged organic species, migrate toward the anode
(Figure   3).  Electromigration  does not  require
advective flow of pore water for the chemical species
to move. In fine-grained soil, the electric current also
causes electroosmosis,  which  is  an  electrically
induced hydraulic flow of ground or soil pore water
between the electrodes. This flow can carry neutrally
charged species with it. Suspended, charged colloids
and miscelles can  also  move  by electrokinetics
through  the process  of electrophoresis.  Electro-
phoresis,  in this  instance, is  similar  to  electro-
migration except that the species moving are  not
single molecules.

Electrolysis  reactions  (conversion  of electrical
energy into chemical potential energy) create H2 and
OH" at the cathode and O2 and H+ at the anode. These
reactions create an acid  front near the anode and a
base front near the cathode that migrate towards each
other. The acid front aids in increasing the mobility
of cationic species,  but in some soils, it can retard
electroosmois (Saichek and Reddy 2005).  The  hy-
droxide front needs to  be controlled to avoid the
premature precipitation of some target metal ions.

This technology can be applied to contaminant con-
centration ranges  from a few ppm to greater than
10,000 ppm, but may not be effective for treating
multiple contaminants that have significantly differ-
ent concentrations. The target compounds are either
extracted to a recovery  system or deposited at the
electrode. Surfactants and complexing agents may be
used to increase solubility and assist in the movement
of the contaminant, although care should  be taken
  when choosing between charged (anionic/cationic)
  and neutral surfactants. When electroosmotic flow is
  from the anode to the cathode, the flow will assist
  cationic species and retard anionic ones (Saichek
  and Reddy 2005).

  For the electrokinetics to work, the soil moisture
  must be conductive and sufficient to allow electro-
  migration  but, optimally, not  saturated. Removal
  efficiencies are directly related to the solubility of
  the target contaminant (which can be amended with
  surfactants), its electrical charge,  and its concen-
  tration  relative to other ions or contaminant species
  (Van Cauwenberghe 1997).

  Unfavorable conditions at a site include soil with a
  high cation exchange capacity, high buffering ca-
  pacity,  high naturally  occurring organic content,
  salinity, and very low moisture content. The pres-
  ence of subsurface metal structures or utilities can
  also adversely affect performance.




1

Cathode
Electrode
^Solution
0
Ion

Source NAVFAC 2000,

II II
- +


Anode
Electrode
Moist
Soil O
ion
Electrode

r
1






Figure 3. Simple Electrokinetic Separation
System

  Electrokinetic separation has been demonstrated at
  several sites with mixed results. An independent
  evaluation was performed at  the  Department  of
  Energy  (DOE) Sandia National  Laboratories  in
  Albuquerque, New Mexico for their patented pro-
  cess with Cr(VI)  as the target contaminant  (U.S.
  EPA 1999). Also, a field test was conducted by the
  Navy at Point Mugu with one conclusion being that
  there was a large discrepancy between what was
  expected from the bench study, which showed the
  technology would be very effective, versus what was
  actually obtained in the field, where the technology
  performed poorly (ESTCP 2000).
                                                14

-------
A system that uses in situ treatment combined with
electrokinetic separation is the Lasagna™ technique.
In this system electrode arrays and treatment zones
(e.g.,  crushed  limestone,  zero  valent  iron)  are
interlayered. The applied current causes the contam-
inants to move  through the treatment zones where
they are either destroyed or immobilized. Lasagna™
was applied with  some  success to treat  a TCE
contaminated clay soil at the DOE gaseous diffusion
plant in Paducah, Kentucky (U.S. DOE 2002).

Because of the limited application of electrokinetic
separation, reliable cost data for full-scale applica-
tions are scarce. Costs will  vary significantly  de-
pending upon the concentration of the target contam-
inant, presence  of non-target ions, and soil charac-
teristics and moisture content. Estimates from three
vendors were collected by Van Cauwenberghe (1997)
and ranged from $20 to $100 per cubic yard for one
vendor to $60 to $225  per cubic yard  for the high
vendor estimate.

Cited and Other References

Alshawabkeh, A. 2001. Basics and Applications of
Electrokinetic Remediation.  Northeastern Univer-
sity, 95 pp. http://wwwl.coe.neu.edu/~aalsha/short
course.pdf

Environmental  Security Technology Certification
Program (ESTCP). 2000. Final In-Situ Electrokinetic
Remediation  of   Metal   Contaminated   Soils
Technology Status  Report,  SFIM-AEC-ET-CR-
99022. US Army Environmental Center, 30 pp, July
2000.   http://www.estcp.org/documents/techdocs/
ISERMCS  Report.pdf

NAVFAC. 2000. TechData Sheet: A Demonstration
of Electrokinetic Remediation, TDS-2084-ENV, 2 pp.

Roulier;  M.,  M.   Kemper;  P. Cluxton.  2002.
Horizontal  Configuration of the Lasagna™ Treat-
ment Technology. User Guide, EPA 600/R-02/033.
U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, Office of
Research and Development, 38 pp. http://nepis.epa.
gov/pubtitleORD .htm

Saichek, R. and K. Reddy. 2005. Electrokinetically
enhanced remediation of hydrophobic organic com-
pounds in soils: A review. Critical Reviews in En-
vironmental Science and Technology, 35: 115-192.
http://www.uic.edu/classes/cemm/cemmlab/35-2-
2005.pdf
U.S. DOE. 2002. Final Remedial Action Report for
Lasagna™ Phase lib In-Situ Remediation of Solid
Waste Management Unit 91 at the Paducah Gaseous
Diffusion Plant, Paducah,  Kentucky, OR/072037
&D1, 80 pp.  http://www.rtdf.org/public/lasagna/
lasagna final a.pdf

U.S. EPA. 1997. Electrokinetic Laboratory and Field
Processes Applicable to Radioactive and Hazardous
Mixed Waste in Soil and Groundwater. EPA 402/R-
97/006. Office of Radiation and Indoor Air.  July
1997. http://nepis.epa.gov/pubtitleOAR.htm

U.S. EPA.  1999. Sandia National  Laboratories In
Situ Electrokinetic Extraction  Technology Inno-
vative Technology Evaluation Report, EPA 540/R-
97/509. Office of Research and Development, 69 pp.
http://www.epa.gov/ORD/SITE/reports/540r97509/
540r97509.pdf

Van Cauwenberghe, L. 1997. Electrokinetics. Tech-
nology Overview Report. Ground  Water Remedi-
ation Technologies Analysis Center.

3.2 Biological Treatment Technologies

Biological treatment  involves  the use of micro-
organisms or vegetation (phytoremediation). Many
naturally occurring  microorganisms  (typically,
bacteria and fungi) can transform hazardous chem-
icals to substances that may be less hazardous than
the original compounds. Microrganisms also have
been used to alter the valence  of some hazardous
metals (e.g., Cr(VI)), thereby  making them less
hazardous and less mobile. Several  plant species
have the ability to bioaccumulate heavy metals
found  in the  soil,  and some  tree  species can
sequester, destroy, and/or  evapotranspire various
organic compounds.

Microbial bioremediation occurs under both aerobic
and anaerobic conditions and at contaminated sites
as either intrinsic and/or enhanced  biodegradation.
Intrinsic  bioremediation depends  on  indigenous
microorganisms to degrade contaminants without
any  amendments. Monitored natural  attenuation
(MNA) often relies on intrinsic bioremediation as an
important removal mechanism. During enhanced
bioremediation, biodegradation is facilitated by
manipulating the microbial environment. Typically,
the  environment  is  manipulated by supplying
amendments, such as  air, organic substrates, nutri-
ents, and other compounds, whose absence limit
                                               15

-------
treatment. In some cases, bioremediation has been
enhanced by  adding microbial cultures  (bioaug-
mentation).

3.2.1 Bioventing

Bioventing involves the injection of a gas into the
subsurface to  enhance  the  biodegradation of  a
contaminant. The gas can be used to keep the sub-
surface aerobic or anaerobic, or to provide  a sub-
strate that enables cometabolic degradation to occur.

Aerobic Bioventing

Aerobic  bioventing  has  a robust track  record in
treating aerobically degradable contaminants,  such as
fuels.  Bioventing involves supplying oxygen to
contaminated  unsaturated  soils with low  oxygen
concentrations to  facilitate aerobic microbial biode-
gradation. Using the supplied oxygen, the microbes
oxidize the contaminants to gain energy and  carbon
for growth.  Oxygen is typically introduced by air
injection wells that push air into the subsurface.

Aerobically degradable contaminants may be  treated
by  bioventing, but fuels have received the most
attention. The U.S. Air Force Bioventing Initiative
and the U.S. EPA Bioremediation  Field Initiative
evaluated bioventing at 125 sites contaminated by
petroleum hydrocarbons. At sites where initial  studies
were positive, pilot-scale bioventing was installed
and operated  for  one  year.  The experience from
bioventing  demonstrations  at these  sites  was
condensed into amanual (U.S. EPA 1995a& 1995b).
The manual contains  information  on bioventing
principles; site characterization; field treatability
testing; system design, operation, and installation; site
closure; and techniques to demonstrate the extent and
mechanism for contaminant removal. Based  on this
research, bioventing proved to be an economical and
effective   method  to  treat   unsaturated  soil
contaminated  by petroleum  products. Regulatory
acceptance of this technology  has occurred in 30
states and in all  10  EPA regions. The use  of this
technology  in the private  sector has  increased
following the  U.S. Air Force Bioventing Initiative
and the U.S. EPA Bioremediation Field  Initiative.
Estimated costs range from $10 to $60 per cubic yard
(U.S. EPA 1995b).

In addition to fuels, aerobic bioventing has treated a
variety of other contaminants,  including nonhalo-
genated solvents, such as benzene, acetone, toluene,
and phenol; lightly halogenated solvents, such as
1,2-dichloroethane, dichloromethane,  and chloro-
benzene; and SVOCs, such as some PAHs (Figure
4). The principles  outlined in the manual are also
applicable  for aerobically degradable  non-fuel
contaminants, but  since the experience with these
other types of contaminants is more limited, more
information may be needed. For example, laboratory
and pilot-scale studies may be needed to evaluate
effectiveness, design the bioventing system, esti-
mate treatment times, and demonstrate  that bio-
degradation is the primary mechanism of removal. In
evaluating   the  feasibility  of  treating   other
contaminants, the key is to understand the volatility
relative to the biodegradability.

Bioventing is typically operated in air  injection
mode  to alleviate  low  oxygen  levels in  the
subsurface. The injection system should be designed
considering  soil  gas  permeability,  contaminant
diffusion  and distribution,  and  environmental
factors, such  as moisture content, pH, temperature,
and electron  acceptor  conditions.  When building
foundations or similar structures are close to the site,
vacuum extraction wells, which draw air through the
subsurface, may be used to avoid the buildup of
contaminated, and possibly explosive, vapors in the
building basements.

Extracted gases require treatment since volatile com-
pounds may be removed from the ground. In cases
of remote locations without electric power, passive
air delivery systems may be used. These systems use
one-way valves and changes in barometric pressure
to deliver air to the subsurface;  however, passive
systems may have longer treatment times depending
on the  quantities of air supplied to the subsurface.
Compared to soil vapor extraction, all bioventing
delivery systems employ lower air flow rates that
provide only the  amount  of oxygen required to
enhance removal. When operated properly, the low
flow rates of air injection do not result in the release
of the  contaminants into the atmosphere through
volatilization.

To  determine if bioventing  is  appropriate  at  a
specific site,  existing site data should be evaluated
and, if  needed,  additional data  collected. For
example, information about the types, quantities, and
three-dimensional  distribution of contaminants is
needed. This  includes the presence and location of
free  product and  whether there is  a chance  of
                                                16

-------
                                  1.0E+02
                                  1.0E+01 •;
                                  1.0E+00-:
                                   1.0E-01 -.
continuing contamination from leaking pipes  or
tanks. Bioventing alone is not sufficient to remediate
sites with large quantities of free product or ongoing
releases. Information about the historical water table
levels   and  soil   characteristics,   such  as  gas
permeability, is also needed. A  soil gas survey can
provide useful  information, especially at sites with
relatively  shallow  contam-
ination (depths typically less
than  20 ft).  The soil  gas
survey is useful to determine
whether  oxygen-limited
conditions exist. Low oxygen
levels (less than five percent)
are  a good indicator  that
existing  bacteria are capable
of  degrading  the  contam-
inants  of  concern,  because
soil  gas in uncontaminated
soil generally exhibits oxygen
concentrations   similar  to
ambient  air. In  addition, the
soil gas survey can be  useful
in delineating the  extent of
contamination and identifying
locations for vent wells and
monitoring  points.  If  this
preliminary information looks
promising, more specific in-
formation should be gathered,
such as soil contaminant con-
centrations  and distribution
and   soil  characterization.
Respiration rate,   soil  gas
permeability,   and  oxygen
radius of influence will be
needed to properly design the
system.
                                                    and amount  of  contaminant  removed,  oxygen
                                                    supply, and carbon dioxide generation, as well as
                                                    mass balances relating the three amounts, may be
                                                    useful in establishing bioremediation as the primary
                                                    mechanism of removal. For sites where non-fuel
                                                    contaminants  are to be treated by bioventing, other
                                                    factors may be considered in establishing biological
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                                                           Aqueous Solubility (mmoles/Liter)
                               Source: Downev et al. 2004 and U.S. EPA 1995.
Performance monitoring, after
a bioventing system has been
installed,  typically includes
soil gas monitoring to ensure
that the site is well oxygenated, in situ respiration
testing to monitor the progress of remediation, and
operation and maintenance of the bioventing system.
At some sites, surface emissions sampling may be
needed. At sites using  extractive bioventing, the
degree of volatilization versus biodegradation may be
determined by  measuring  offgas concentrations.
Injection-based systems may be briefly reconfigured
to gain similar information. Measurements of the rate
                              Figure 4. Amenability of Common Contaminants to Bioventing Technologies
                              (aerobic, anaerobic, and cometabolic)
                                                    activity  as  the primary  mechanism  of removal.
                                                    Finally, measurement of stable isotope ratios may be
                                                    useful in qualitatively validating biodegradation as
                                                    the  mechanism  of  contaminant  removal.  This
                                                    measurement is not required, but it is available to
                                                    resolve regulatory concerns.

                                                    Aerobic bioventing  has  proven  to be  a useful
                                                    cleanup technology at many sites under a variety of
                                                 17

-------
conditions, but like all technologies, bioventing has
some limitations. One limitation revolves around the
ability to deliver oxygen to the contaminated soil. For
example,  soil with  an  extremely  high moisture
content may be difficult to biovent due to reduced
soil  gas permeability.  Similarly, low permeability
soils limit the ability to  distribute air through the
subsurface; however, in both cases, the design of the
bioventing system may compensate for low perme-
ability. Sites with shallow contamination also pose a
problem to bioventing because designing the system
to minimize environmental  release  and achieve
sufficient aeration, may be difficult. In this situation,
operating in extraction mode may be needed.

Another limitation is that aerobic bioventing will not
stimulate contaminant removal  if the contaminated
zone is aerobic. If a soil gas survey measures soil
oxygen levels consistently above five percent, then
the soil is sufficiently aerated for biodegradation to
occur, and oxygen is not  limiting degradation. Bio-
venting will not enhance removal in this situation.
This situation is unusual, and if encountered, may
indicate that some other species, such as metals, is
inhibiting degradation.

While relatively inexpensive, aerobic bioventing can
take  a few years to clean up a site, depending on the
contaminant concentrations and site-specific removal
rates. For petroleum  hydrocarbon sites, the heavier
the product being treated, the longer the remediation
time. If a  quicker cleanup is  needed, other tech-
nologies may be more appropriate.

Anaerobic Bioventing

While  aerobic bioventing is useful  for degrading
many hydrocarbons, some chlorinated compounds are
not  effectively treated aerobically.  Microbes may
degrade these contaminants directly  via anaerobic
reductive   dechlorination  or   through anaerobic
cometabolic pathways. Anaerobic reductive dechlori-
nation is a biological mechanism, typically marked by
sequential removal of chlorine ions from a molecule.
Microbes possessing  this  pathway gain energy from
this  process. In some situations, microorganisms
fortuitously degrade contaminants,  while gaining
energy   and  carbon   from   other  compounds
(cometabolites).  These organisms  usually  do not
obtain any benefit from contaminant degradation, and
the removal process is called  cometabolism.  An-
aerobic bioventing  may involve  both anaerobic
reductive  dechlorination  and anaerobic cometab-
olism to destroy the contaminants of concern.

Anaerobic bioventing uses the same type of gas
delivery system as aerobic bioventing, but instead of
injecting air, nitrogen and electron donors  (e.g.,
hydrogen and carbon dioxide) are used. The nitrogen
displaces the soil oxygen, and the electron donor gas
facilitates  microbial  dechlorination. Volatile and
semivolatile organic compounds may be produced
during  anaerobic  bioventing  that  are  not
anaerobically degradable. Volatile compounds may
be aerobically degraded in the soil surrounding the
treatment  zone. Semivolatile compounds may be
treated by following anaerobic bioventing with aero-
bic bioventing. Since aerobic and anaerobic biovent-
ing share  similar gas delivery systems, the switch
can be made by simply changing the injected gas.

Anaerobic bioventing is  an emerging technology
that may be useful in treating highly chlorinated
compounds, such as PCE, TCE, pentachlorophenol
(PCP), some polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and
pesticides, such as lindane and dichlorodiphenyl-
trichloroethane  (DDT). Due to the  limited experi-
ence with this technique, laboratory, pilot, and field
demonstrations are recommended to apply this tech-
nology with confidence to remediate a site.

Particular attention should be paid to the formation
of degradation products and whether contaminants
are converted to non-toxic compounds. For example,
sites contaminated by PCE and TCE may not show
complete dechlorination, rather dechlorination stalls
atcis-l,2-dichloroethene (cis-DCE) or vinyl chloride
(VC). Since VC  is more toxic than the original
contaminants, incomplete dechlorination would not
be acceptable. The cis-DCE or VC stall may be due
to the availability of an electron donor or the
indigenous microbial  community.  If the electron
donor is limited, additional donor should be added.
If the indigenous culture is not able to completely
dechlorinate the solvents, the site could be switched
to another type of bioventing (e.g.,  cis-DCE is
aerobically degradable through cometabolism, and
VC is aerobically degradable). Laboratory testing
can demonstrate whether complete dechlorination
occurs at a site, provide information about suitable
electron donors and the quantities required, estimate
removal rates, and demonstrate whether hazardous
byproducts are formed.
                                                18

-------
As with the other bioventing technologies, the ability
to deliver gases to the subsurface is important. Soil
with a high moisture content or low gas permeability
may require careful  design to deliver appropriate
levels of nitrogen  and electron donor. Sites with
shallow contamination or nearby buildings are also a
problem,  since this  technology  is  operated  by
injecting gases. In addition, anaerobic bioventing can
take a few years to clean up a site depending on the
contaminant concentrations and site-specific removal
rates.  If  a quicker cleanup is needed, other tech-
nologies  may be  more  appropriate.  Finally,  no
rigorous  cost  models have been developed for
anaerobic bioventing; however, the costs should be
similar to aerobic bioventing  with the following
additional costs: laboratory treatability test and field
testing; nitrogen and electron donor additions; and
additional soil and gas analyses.

Cometabolic Bioventing

Cometabolic bioventing involve s inj ecting air into the
subsurface along with a suitable gaseous substrate to
promote  Cometabolic  reactions  with  the target
compound. As with anaerobic cometabolism, some
microorganisms fortuitously  degrade  contaminants
while oxidizing other compounds (cometabolites) for
energy and carbon. The organisms usually do not
obtain any benefit from contaminant degradation. A
suitable  substrate  should be  determined  in the
laboratory but may include methane, ethane, propane,
butane, andpentane. The delivery system is similar to
other bioventing technologies and subject to many of
the  same limitations.  Cometabolic bioventing  is
applicable to contaminants, such as TCE, trichloro-
ethane (TCA),  ethylene dibromide, and dichloro-
ethene (DCE), that resist direct aerobic degradation.
This technology is not applicable to PCE.

The Bioremediation  Consortium  under the Reme-
diation Technology Development Forum  (RTDF)
conducted Cometabolic bioventing demonstrations at
Dover and Hill Air Force Bases  (AFB). At Dover
AFB, a  field demonstration  of  Cometabolic  bio-
venting  was done  at Building 719. The  site was
contaminated with fuel and solvents during engine
inspection and maintenance operations. The targeted
contaminants of the demonstration were TCE, as high
as 250 mg/kg; TCA, 10 to 1,000 mg/kg; and DCE, 1
to 20 mg/kg. Laboratory  tests were used  to select
propane as the Cometabolic substrate and predict that
a substrate acclimation period would be needed. The
test plot was acclimated to propane addition through
pulsed propane/air injections for three months, and
then the test plot was operated for 14 months with
continuous propane injection.  Concentrations  of
TCE, TCA, and DCE were reduced to less than 0.25,
0.5 and  0.25  mg/kg,  respectively.  Soil chloride
accumulation  confirmed biodegradation as  the
mechanism of removal (U.S. EPA 2000).

Because experience with cometabolic bioventing is
limited, laboratory and pilot-scale studies are recom-
mended to evaluate effectiveness, select a cometab-
olite, identify needs for acclimation periods, design
the system,  and  estimate treatment times. Opera-
tional costs  should be similar to those of aerobic
bioventing except for the addition of the substrate
gas and additional monitoring of soil and soil gas.

Cited and Other References

Abriola,  L.,  J. Lang, and  K. Rathfelder.  1997.
Michigan Soil  Vapor  Extraction  Remediation
(MISER) Model: A Computer Program to Model
Soil Vapor Extraction and Bioventing of Organic
Chemicals in Unsaturated Geological Material, EPA
600/R-97/099. U.S.  EPA, Office  of Research and
Development, 260 pp.  http://nepis.epa.gov/pubtitle
ORD.htm

Downey,  D.,  R. Miller, and  T. Dragoo.  2004.
Procedures for Conducting  Bioventing Pilot Tests
and Long-Term Monitoring of Bioventing Systems.
Air Force Center for Environmental Excellence.
NTIS: ADA423587. 80pp. http://stinet.dtic.mil/cgi-
bin/GetTRDoc?AD=ADA423587&Location=
U2&doc=GetTRDoc.pdf

NAVFAC. 2003. FINAL  REPORT:  Addendum
-Natural  Pressure-Driven  Passive  Bioventing,
TR-2221-ENV, 74 pp. http://enviro.nfesc.navv.mil/
erb/erb a/restoration/technologies/remed/bio/tr-22
21-biovent.pdf

NAVFAC. 2000. Passive Bioventing in Stratified
Soils and Shallow Groundwater Conditions, NFESC
TDS-2083-ENV,6pp. http://enviro.nfesc.navy.mil/
erb/erb  a/restoration/technologies/remed/bio/tds-
2083biovent.pdf

NAVFAC. 2003. Final Report: Addendum -Natural
Pressure-Driven Passive Bioventing, TR-2221-ENV,
74pp. http: //enviro .nfe sc .navy .mil/erb/erb a/re stor
ation/technologies/remed/bio/tr-2221 -biovent.pdf
                                               19

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NAVFAC. 2006 (Nov). Bioventing Cost Estimator.
Naval Facilities Engineering Command. Webpage.
http://enviro.nfesc.navv.mil/erb/erb a/restoration/
technologies/remed/bio/BVCE.XLS

Shah, J.K., G.D. Sayles, M.T. Suidan, P. Mihopoulos,
and S. Kaskassian. 2001. Anaerobic bioventing of
unsaturated zone contaminated with DDT and DNT.
Water Sci Technol. 2001;43(2):35-42.  Abstract at
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?
cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list uids=l 1380
202&dopt=Abstract

Shewfelt,  K.,  H. Lee,  and  R.  Zytner.  2005.
Optimization of nitrogen for bioventing of gasoline
contaminated soil. J. Environ. Eng. Sci. 4(1): 29-42.
http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/rp/rppdf/s04-040.pdf

U.S. EPA. 1995a. Manual: Bioventing Principles and
Practices, Volume I: Bioventing Principles, EPA 540/
R-95/534a. Office  of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response and Office of Research and Development,
94pp.  http://nepis.epa.gov/pubtitleOSWER.htm

U.S. EPA. 1995b. Manual: Bioventing Principles and
Practices,  Volume II: Bioventing  Design, EPA
540/R-95/534b. Office of Solid Waste and Emer-
gency  Response   and Office of Research  and
Development, 94  pp.  http://nepis.epa.gov/pubtitle
OSWER.htm

U.S. EPA. 2000.  Cost  and Performance  Report:
Cometabolic Bioventing at Building 719, Dover Air
Force Base Dover, Delaware. Office of Soild Waste
and Emergency Response, 6 pp. http://costperform
ance.org/pdf/Dover719Bio.PDF

U.S. EPA. 2002. Innovative Technology Evaluation
Report:  Envirogen Propane Biostimulation Tech-
nology for In-Situ Treatment of MTBE Contam-
inated Ground Water, EPA 600/R02/092. Office of
Research and  Development, 152 pp.   http://www.
epa.gov/ada/download/reports/600R02092/600
R02092-full.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2006. In Situ and Ex Situ Biodegradation
Technologies for Remediation of Contaminated Sites,
EPA 600/R-06/015. http://www.epa.gov/nrmrl/pub
lications.html
3.2.2 Phytoremediation

Phytoremediation uses plants to extract, degrade,
contain, or immobilize contaminants in soil, ground-
water, and other contaminated media. The phytore-
mediation mechanisms used to treat contaminated
soil in situ  are phytoextraction, rhizodegradation,
phytodegradation, phytovolatilization, and phyto-
stabilization.

Phytoremediation is best used to treat large areas of
shallow contamination.  Because  high  levels of
contaminants may be toxic to plants and inhibit their
growth, phytoremediation is best applied to low and
moderate levels of contamination, used in conjunc-
tion with other treatment methods, or used as a final
polishing step in site remediation.

The various mechanisms of phytoremediation can
treat a wide range of contaminants, including metals,
VOCs,  PAHs,  petroleum  hydrocarbons,  radio-
nuclides, and munitions, although not all mechan-
isms are applicable  to all contaminants. Phyto-
remediation may take longer than other technologies
to treat a site, but it has the potential to be less
expensive than  excavating  and treating  large
volumes of soil ex situ.

There are a number of limitations to the technology
that must be considered before it can be imple-
mented at a site. The depth of the contamination
requiring treatment must be within the  range of
depth  of plant root growth; thus,  treatment of
contaminated soil typically focuses on the upper 8
to 10 inches of the soil horizon, although the roots of
hybrid poplar trees, a species commonly used in
phytoremediation, can grow to depths of about 15
feet. Contaminants must be in contact with the root
zone to be treated; therefore, a denser root mass is
preferred to help contact more of the contamination.
Because treatment depends on this contact with the
root zone, phytoremediation is limited by the rate of
root growth. Slower growth rates increase the time
required to treat a site, and winter months may shut
down the treatment system completely while plants
are dormant.

Another limitation of phytoremediation is possible
bioconcentration of contaminants up the food chain.
Several phytoremediation  mechanisms  work by
incorporating the contaminant into the  plant or
holding it within the root zone. The contaminated
vegetation and root zone may impact plant-eating
                                               20

-------
animals and soil organisms. This is particularly a
concern with metals and radionuclide contamination
that accumulate in plants and the root zone. Most
plants do not accumulate significant levels of organic
contaminants (U.S. EPA 2000); thus, bioconcen-
tration is of less concern. The potential for plant-
eating animals to be exposed is greatest when these
contaminants accumulate in fruits, seeds, and leaves,
so monitoring the fate of contaminants within the
plants is important. To avoid bioconcentration in the
food chain, contaminated plants can be harvested for
disposal, destruction, or the extraction of metals for
reuse ("phytomining"). In these cases, perimeter
fencing and overhead  netting  can  be installed to
prevent animals from consuming contaminated plant
matter.

Finally,  it  is  important to  ensure  that unwanted
transfer of contaminants from soil to other media,
such as the volatilization of organic compounds to the
atmosphere through plant uptake and transpiration,
does not occur or that the transfer results  in the
destruction  of the contaminants.  Evaluating  the
limitations of phytoremediation in its various appli-
cations, as well as assessing its potential effectiveness
at contaminated sites, can be done in laboratory and
field studies prior to implementation. Samples of site
soil containing the target contaminants in a range of
concentrations  should be tested using the specific
plants under consideration. Ultimately, sites under-
going phytoremediation must be monitored to assess
the fate of contaminants.

In general, phytoremediation has been implemented
at a number of sites at full-scale (U.S. EPA 2006).
Also, a wide range of site conditions, plants, and
contaminants have been studied under laboratory or
field testing. As of this publication, phytoemediation
technologies have been selected 18 times by the
Superfund program.

Phytoextraction

Phytoextraction involves the uptake of contaminants
by plant roots, with subsequent accumulation in plant
tissue, which may require that the plant be harvested
and properly disposed of. This mechanism is typically
used to treat inorganic contaminants, such as metals,
metalloids, and radionuclides. Organic contaminants
are more likely to  be  transformed,  rather  than
accumulated, within the plant tissue. Successful field
applications of phytoextraction to up take metals have
been limited;  however, there  is some promising
research for using phytoextraction on mercury and
persistent organic pollutants.

Plants  used in phytoextraction include  Indian
mustard, pennycress, and alyssum sunflowers. They
are typically effective only in the top one foot of soil
because of their shallow root systems and generally
slow growth. Banuelos et al. (2005) has shown that
Indian mustard can be genetically modified to grow
in contaminated soil with greater biomass to hyper-
accumulate  selenium  in a  shorter time than un-
modified Indian mustard. In other genetic research,
Meagher  (undated)  is  modifying various plant
species to survive in mercury-contaminated soil and
to transform organic mercury into  ionic  and/or
metallic mercury. The mercury is either sequestered
in the plant or transpired.

Persistent organic pollutants,  many of which are
pesticides, resist biodegradation and may remain in
the environment for decades. White (2001) and
Martina (2000) have shown that a number of plants
are capable of  extracting chemicals,  such  as
chlordane and 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl) 1,1 -dichloro-
ethene (p.p'-DDE), and storing them in their roots,
leaves, and fruits.

Rhizodegradation

Rhizodegradation is essentially "plant-assisted bio-
remediation" in that the root zone enhances  micro-
bial  activity, thus increasing the  breakdown  of
organic contaminants (such as petroleum  hydro-
carbons, PAHs, pesticides, BTEX, chlorinated sol-
vents, PCP,  PCBs, and surfactants) in the  soil. The
term comes from "rhizosphere," which is the zone of
soil influenced by plant roots. This zone extends
only about 1 mm from each root.

The presence of plant roots increases soil aeration
and moderates soil moisture, making conditions
more favorable to bioremediation. Bioremediation is
enhanced by the production of root exudates, such as
sugars, amino acids, and other compounds, that can
stimulate the population growth and  activity  of
native microbes. Root exudates may  also serve  as
food for the microbes, which can result in cometa-
bolism of contaminants as degradation of exudates
occurs. Because the microbes consume nutrients, the
plants  in a rhizodegradation plot  often require
additional fertilization.
                                                21

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The  advantage of  rhizodegradation is  the  actual
breakdown of contaminants, rather than their trans-
location; thus, harvesting is not necessary. In some
instances, complete mineralization of the contam-
inant can occur. Success, however, is site-specific,
and  laboratory microcosms  may not reflect the
microbial  conditions  encountered  in  the   field.
Petroleum  hydrocarbons have  been shown to be
successfully degraded in the rhizosphere; however,
degradation  of  aged  hydrocarbons   has   been
demonstrated to be more problematic.

Phytode gradation

Like phytoextraction, phytodegradation involves the
uptake of contaminants; however, the contaminants
are subsequently  broken down through metabolic
processes within the plant.  Phytodegradation also
comprises the breakdown of contaminants in the soil
through the effects of enzymes and other compounds
produced by the plant tissues (other than the roots).

Phytodegradation is applicable  to organic contam-
inants. Their  uptake  is affected by  their hydro-
phobicity,  solubility,   and   polarity.  Moderately
hydrophobic and polar compounds are more likely to
be taken up after sorbing to plant roots (Schnoor et al.
1995 and Bell 1992). Contaminants with the potential
for phytodegradation include chlorinated solvents,
herbicides, insecticides, PCP, PCBs, and munitions.

Phytovolatilization

Phytovolatilization  is the uptake of a contaminant
into  a plant and its subsequent transpiration to the
atmosphere, or the transformation  or phytodegra-
dation of the  contaminant with subsequent trans-
piration of the transformation or degradation pro-
duct(s) to the atmosphere. Phytovolatilization is more
commonly applied to groundwater, but can also be
applied to soluble soil contaminants.

Phytovolatilization  involving  transformation  or
degradation of the contaminant has the advantage of
potentially creating a  less  toxic  product that  is
transpired; however,  this also poses  a potential
drawback in that degradation of some contaminants,
like  TCE, may produce even more toxic products
(e.g., vinyl chloride). This possibility has to be asses-
sed on a site-specific  basis, and measurement of
transpired compounds can be difficult. Once in the
atmosphere, these products may be more effectively
degraded by sunlight (photodegradation) than they
would be by the plant (phytodegradation).
Both organic and inorganic contaminants have been
treated by  phytovolatilization. Inorganic contam-
inants include selenium, mercury, and arsenic; how-
ever, simply volatilizing a contaminant may not be
an acceptable alternative.

Phytostabilization

Phytostabilization is a mechanism that immobilizes
contaminants—mainly metals—within the root zone,
limiting  their migration. The contaminants  are
immobilized by adsorption of metals to plant roots,
precipitation of metal ions (e.g., due to a change in
pH), formation of metal complexes, or a change to a
less toxic redox state. Phytostabilization can occur
when plants alter  the chemical  and  microbial
makeup of the soil (e.g., through the production of
exudates or carbon dioxide), which affects the fate
and transport of the soil metals. Phytostabilization
also  encompasses  the  use of plants to prevent
migration of soil contaminants with wind and water
erosion, leaching, and soil dispersion.

Since contaminants are retained in the soil,  phyto-
stabilization does not require  the  harvesting and
disposal of plants. A phytostabilization system must
be evaluated, however, to ensure that translocation
of contaminants  into   the  plant tissue   is   not
occurring.  Since contaminants remain in the root
zone, the health of the plants must be maintained to
prevent future release  of contaminants  when  the
plants die or are inadvertently destroyed. Mainte-
nance may  include the addition of fertilizers or soil
amendments.

Cited and Other References

Bell, R.M. 1992. Higher Plant  Accumulation of
Organic  Pollutants from Soils.  EPA Office of
Research and Development. Risk Reduction Engi-
neering Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio. EPA 600/R-
92/138.

Banuelos, G. et al. 2005. Field trial of transgenic
Indian mustard plants  shows  enhanced  phytore-
mediation  of  selenium-contaminated  sediment.
Environ. Sci. Technol. 39: 1771-1777.

Brigmon, R. et al.  2003. FY02 Final Report on
Phytoremediation of Chlorinated Ethenes in  South-
ern Sector Seepline  Sediments  of the  Savannah
River Site.  U.S. DOE, 171 pp.  http://sti.srs.gov/full
text/tr2002557/tr2002557.pdf
                                                22

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Ibeanusi, V.  and  D. Grab.  2004.  Radionuclide
Biological Remediation Resource Guide, EPA 905/B-
04/001. U.S.  EPA,  Region  5,  68  pp.    http://
cluin.org/download/remed/905b04001 .pdf

ITRC.   2001.   Phytotechnology   Technical  and
Regulatory  Guidance Document. Interstate  Tech-
nology and Regulatory  Council, 123 pp.   http://
www. itrcweb. org/Documents/PHYTO-2 .pdf

Martina, M., W. lannucci-Berger, and L Dykas. 2000.
Chlordane uptake and its translocation in food crops.
Agric. Food Chem. 48(5): 1909-1915.

Meagher, R. 2006 (October).  Mercury Research.
http://www.genetics.uga.edu/rbmlab/phyto/mer
curypol.html

Pivetz,  B.  2001.  Ground Water   Issue:  Phyto-
remediation of Contaminated Soil and Ground Water
at Hazardous Waste Sites, EPA 540/S-01/500. U.S.
EPA, Office of Research and Development,  36 pp.
http://www.epa.gov/ada/download/issue/epa
540  sOl  500.pdf

Remediation  Technologies Development Forum.
2006 (October). Evaluation of Phytoremediation for
Management of Chlorinated Solvents in Soil  and
Groundwater. Phytoremediation of Organics Action
Team,  Chlorinated Solvents Workgroup,  42 pp.
http://www.rtdf.org/public/phyto/chlor solv man
agement.pdf

Reynolds, C. 2004. Cost and Performance Report:
Field  Demonstration of  Rhizosphere-Enhanced
Treatment of Organics-Contaminated Soils on Native
American Lands with Application to Northern FUD
Sites, ERDC/CRRELLR-04-19. U.S. DoD, Environ-
mental Security Technology Certification Program,
53 pp. http://stinet.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord
&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA431035

Schnoor, J., L. Licht, S. McCutcheon, N. Wolfe, and
L. Carreira, 1995. Phytoremediation of Organic and
nutrient  contaminants.  Environ.  Sci.  Technol.
29:318A-323A.

Schnoor, J. 1997.  Technology Evaluation Report:
Phytoremediation, TE-98-01. Ground-Water Reme-
diation Technologies Analysis Center, 43 pp.
U.S. EPA. 2000. Introduction to Phytoremediation,
EPA 600/R-99/107. Office of Research and Devel-
opment, 104 pp.   http://www.cluin.org/download/
remed/introphyto .pdf

U.S. EPA. 2003. Innovative Technology Evaluation
Report:  Phytoremediation of Groundwater  at Air
Force Plant 4 Carswell, Texas,  EPA 540/R-03/506.
Office of Research and Development, 12pp.  http://
www.epa.gov/ORD/NRMRL/pubs/540r03506/
540R03506.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2004. Treatment Technologies for Site
Cleanup: Annual Status Report (Eleventh Edition).
EPA 542/R-03/009.  http://clu-in.org/asr

U.S. EPA. 2006 (October). Phytoremediation Profile
Database,  http://www.cluin.org/products/phyto

White, J. 2001. Plant-facilitated mobilization and
translocation of weathered 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)
1,1-dichloroethene  (p.p'-DDE) from  agricultural
soil. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 20(9): 2047-2052.

3.2.3 Monitored Natural Attenuation

Monitored natural attenuation (MNA) encompasses
the dilution, dispersion,  chemical and biological
degradation, sorption/precipitation,  and/or  radio-
active   decay   of  contaminants  in   soil  and
groundwater (U.S. EPA 1999). It has been applied
mainly to groundwater contamination, but the same
principles apply to soil. Because MNA is a passive
process  in which the reduction in  contaminant
concentration is due solely to natural mechanisms,
continuous sources  of significant contamination
should be addressed before implementing MNA.  If
MNA is implemented, reaching remediation goals
may take longer than other remedies.

Site contaminants most amenable to MNA include
petroleum  hydrocarbons, low-molecular  weight
alcohols, ketones, esters, ethers, and iron and man-
ganese. Under  a narrow range of conditions, MNA
may be applicable to halogenated solvents, lightly
halogenated aromatics, polychlorinated biphenyls,
nitroaromatics, some pesticides, and chromium, cop-
per, cadmium,  lead, zinc, and nickel (NRC 2000).

A full characterization of subsurface conditions  at
the site, including a delineation of the  extent of
contamination  and  the  development  of  a site
conceptual model, are necessary before MNA can be
                                              23

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considered.  As part of the characterization, the
microbial  species  present (more  important for
chlorinated  compounds),   redox  potential,  pH
conditions, mineralogy, and geochemistry should be
evaluated. If the  evaluation concludes  that the
conditions may exist to support natural attenuation,
the next step is to determine if it is occurring. This is
accomplished by looking  at such parameters as
microbial  respiration products,  chemical reaction
products, prevalent metal species, degradation pro-
ducts, and declining concentrations of target com-
pounds/species over time. For a more complete list
and discussion, see Kram and Goetz 1999. If a large
amount of historical data is not available to confirm
that the contaminant mass is stabilized or contracting,
it probably will be necessary to model the fate and
transport of the contaminants to show that migration
is unlikely to occur.

Performance monitoring is an integral part of any
MNA effort (Pope et  al.  2004  and  Wiedemeier,
Lucas, and  Haas 2000). The  monitoring system
should be tailored to site  conditions to enable
detection of any changes in the assumptions used to
select MNA. Key parameters, such as degradation
products or an increase in target metal concentration
that would indicate mobilization, should be chosen
along with an appropriate frequency. The  frequency
of sample collection is related  to the uncertainties
inherent in the site conceptual model and the conse-
quences of failure. As a precaution, a preapproved
site remedial contingency plan should be created that
can be implemented if monitoring indicates MNA is
not meeting the project's performance goals.

The Naval Facilities Engineering Command provides
an estimate  for  implementing MNA  of between
$50,000 and $200,000 per  acre. This cost does not
include  site characterization, which may  be higher
than that for a site not being considered for MNA.
These  cost  estimates  were   developed for  a
groundwater scenario.

Cited and Other References

Brauner, J. et al. 2004. Implementing Monitored
Natural Attenuation and Expediting Closure at Fuel-
Release Sites. Air Force Center for Environmental
Excellence, 247 pp. http://stinet.dtic.mil/cgibin/Get
TRDoc?AD=ADA426387&Location=U2&doc=Get
TRDoc.pdf
Chapelle, F. et al. 2003. Methodology for Estimating
Times of Remediation Associated With Monitored
Natural Attenuation, Water-Resources Investigations
Report 03-4057. U.S. Geological Survey, 58 pp.
http://pubs.usgs.gov/wri/wri034057/

Kennedy, L., J. Everett, and J. Gonzales. Undated.
Aqueous and  Mineral  Intrinsic  Bioremediation
Assessment  (AMIBA) Protocol. Air Force Center
for Environmental Excellence, 284 pp.  http://www.
afcee .brooks .af.mil/products/techtrans/monitored
naturalattenuation/amiba/AMIBA%20Protocol.PDF

Kram, M. and F. Goetz. 1999. User's Guide: Natural
Attenuation  General Data Guide, UG-2035-ENV.
NAVFAC, 38 pp. http://stinet.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/Get
TRDoc?AD=A361097&Location=U2&doc=Get
TRDoc.pdf

Looney, B. and K. Vangelas. 2004. Compatibility of
Alternative Chlorinated Solvent Source Treatment
Strategies with  Monitored Natural Attenuation,
WSRC-MS-2004-00236.  U.S.  DOE,  Savannah
River, 22pp. http://sti.srs.gov/fulltext/ms2004236
/ms200423 6.pdf

NAVFAC.   1998.  Technical   Guidelines  for
Evaluating   Monitored  Natural  Attenuation  of
Petroleum Hydrocarbons and Chlorinated Solvents
in Ground  Water at  Naval  and Marine  Corps
Facilities. 92 pp. http: //enviro .nfe sc .navy .mil/erb/erb
 a/support/wrk grp/artt/mnal 198.pdf

NRC. 2000.  Natural Attenuation for Groundwater
Remediation. National  Academy of  Sciences,
National Research Council, 292 pp. http://books.
nap .edu/catalog/9792 .html

Pope, D. et  al. 2004.  Performance Monitoring of
MNA  Remedies  for  VOCs  in Ground Water,
EPA/600/R-04/027, U.S. EPA, Office of Research
and  Development, http://www.epa.gov/ada/down
load/reports/600R04027/600R04027 fm.pdf

U.S. EPA. 1999.  Use of Monitored Natural Atten-
uation at Superfund, RCRA Corrective Action, and
Underground Storage Tank Sites, Directive 9200.4-
17P.  Office of  Solid  Waste and  Emergency
Response, 41 pp.  http://nepis.epa.gov/pubtitleOSW
ER.htm

Wiedemeier, T.,  M.  Lucas, and P. Haas.  2000.
Designing Monitoring Programs to Effectively
                                               24

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Evaluate the  Performance of Natural Attenuation.
U.S. DoD, Air  Force Center for Environmental
Excellence, 55 pp. http://www.afcee.brooks.af.mil/
products/techtrans/MonitoredNaturalAttenua
tion/ltm.pdf

Wilson, J., J. Cho, B. Wilson, and J. Vardy. 2000.
Natural Attenuation  of MTBE  in the  Subsurface
under Methanogenic Conditions, EPA 600/R-00/006.
U.S. EPA, Office of Research and Development, 59
pp. http://www.epa.gov/ada/download/reports/mtbe
report.pdf

Wilson, J. et al. 2001. Evaluation of the Protocol for
Natural Attenuation of Chlorinated Solvents: Case
Study at the Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant,
EPA 600/R-01/025. U.S.  EPA, Office  of Research
and Development, 49 pp.  http://www.epa.gov/ada/
download/reports/epa  600 rO 1 025 .pdf

Wilson, J., P. Kaiser, and C. Adair. 2005. Monitored
Natural Attenuation of MTBE as a Risk Manage-
ment Option at Leaking Underground Storage Tank
Sites, EPA  600/R-04/1790.  U.S.  EPA,  Office of
Research and Development, 89 pp. http://www.epa.
gov/ada/download/reports/600R04179/600R04
179.pdf
3.3 Thermal Treatment Technologies

Five technologies  are  grouped under the in situ
thermal treatment classification: electrical resistance
heating, steam injection and extraction, conductive
heating, radio-frequency heating, and vitrification.
With  the  exception  of vitrification, all  of these
treatment technologies rely on the addition of heat to
the soil to increase the removal efficiency of volatile
and semivolatile contaminants. Vapor extraction is an
integral part of these  remediation systems to ensure
the removal and treatment of mobilized contaminants.
Liquid extraction is also used during steam injection,
and sometimes with other thermal technologies when
groundwater flow rates are high and/or when  the
contaminant being recovered is semivolatile.

In situ vitrification is  unique  among  the thermal
technologies in that the temperatures used will vitrify
soil. The stable glass that is formed by vitrification
will immobilize any nonvolatile contaminants that are
present, including metals and radioactive materials.

Davis (1997) provides  a general discussion of the
effects of heat on chemical and physical properties of
organic contaminants. Vaporization is the main
mechanism used in these technologies to enhance
the recovery of VOCs. Vapor pressures of organic
compounds increase exponentially with temperature,
causing significant redistribution to the vapor phase
as the subsurface is heated. When  a NAPL is
present, the combined vapor pressure of the NAPL
and water determine the boiling temperature, and
co-boiling of the two liquids occurs at temperatures
less than the boiling point of water. Thus, by raising
the temperature  of  the  subsurface  above  the
co-boiling temperature,  NAPL  can be removed.
Continued  heating  of  the  subsurface  recovers
contaminants from  the  dissolved  and adsorbed
phases as well.

Increasing the temperature also decreases viscosity,
increases solubility, and decreases adsorption, all of
which aid in the recovery of VOCs and SVOCs. For
some  SVOC NAPLs, such as creosote, viscosity
reduction  may  be an important mechanism  for
increased  contaminant  recovery  (Davis  1997).
Hydrolysis may play a role  in the destruction of
some  contaminants (e.g., chlorinated methanes and
ethanes) as the soil temperature approaches 100°C;
however, the breakdown products may be more
recalcitrant than  the   original  contaminants
(Washington 1995).

Care  should be taken in designing the systems to
ensure that all plumbing,  including  monitoring
wells, are capable of withstanding high heat. In the
presence of clay, vadose zone heating by resistivity,
conductance, or radio frequency may result in some
settlement of the treatment area due to the drying of
the clay.

Cited and Other References

Davis, E. 1997. Ground Water Issue: How Heat Can
Enhance  In-situ  Soil  and Aquifer Remediation:
Important Chemical Properties  and Guidance on
Choosing  the   Appropriate  Technique,  EPA
540/S-97/502. U.S. EPA., Office of Research and
Development,  18 pp. http://www.cluin.org/down
load/remed/heatenh .pdf

USAGE. 2006. Interim Unified Facilities Criteria: In
Situ Thermal Remediation, Hazardous, Toxic, and
Radioactive Waste, UFC 3-280-05. U.S. DoD, 258
pp. http://www.environmental.usace.army.mil/sve.
htm
                                               25

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Washington, J. W.  1995. Hydrolysis rates of dis-
solved  volatile  organic compounds:  Principles,
temperature effects  and literature review, Ground
Water, 33(3):415-424.

3.3.1 Electrical Resistance Heating

Electrical resistance  heating (ERH) involves passing
electrical current through moisture in the soil between
an array of electrodes. As the current flows through
the moisture in soil  pores, the resistance of the soil
produces heat. Originally, ERH for remediation
purposes was developed by DOE and Battelle using
six-phase electricity  and hexagonal electrode arrays,
however, expansion of a six-phase hexagonal array
may result in the creation of cold and hot spots within
the target subsurface area. Three-phase power and
triangular  electrode  arrays  are  generally  more
applicable to irregularly shaped cleanup  areas for
full-scale treatment  and are commonly used  today
(Beyke and Fleming 2005).

Electrodes  can be  thought of as wells that are
equipped to deliver electric power at selected depths
and also act as vapor recovery wells. When ground-
water flow rates are high and/or a semivolatile NAPL
is  to be  recovered,  liquids can also be  extracted
(Beyke and Fleming  2002).  Electrodes may be
installed using  conventional drilling rigs. Installation
can also be  done using horizontal or angular drilling
techniques. Care should be taken to ensure that the
potential for stray currents  is accounted for in the
design.

ERH systems can be deployed to any depth and used
in both the vadose and saturated zone. If the system
is deployed only in the vadose zone, water  should be
added  at the electrodes to maintain the  moisture
content and thus, the flow of electricity (U.S.  EPA
2004).

The horizontal spacing between electrodes  is usually
between  14 and 24 feet (Beyke and Fleming 2005).
The trade-off  in distance is  between the cost  of
installing more electrodes and heating the  soil more
quickly or installing fewer electrodes and heating the
soil over a longer time.

While  heating  all soil, ERH preferentially heats the
more conductive silt and clay first. Temperatures over
100°C  can be generated in the saturated zone, and
these   temperatures  produce  steam  and  steam
stripping, which is especially beneficial for the silts
and clays as contaminant movement in them is
usually diffusion limited.

Volatilization and steam stripping with SVE-capture
are the predominant removal mechanisms for most
contaminants using this technology. (Beyke and
Fleming 2005). Soil with a high natural organic
carbon content will slow or prevent the recovery of
some organic contaminants.

U.S.  EPA  (2004)  provides remediation  cost
estimates of $32 and $73 per cubic yard at two full-
scale ERH sites. Beyke and Fleming (2005) estimate
that ERH costs $200,000, plus $40 to $70 per cubic
yard. The technology is proven and has been used at
a number of sites. The number of vendors offering
the technology are limited.

Cited and Other References

Beyke, G. and D. Fleming. 2002. Enhanced removal
of  separate  phase  viscous  fuel  by electrical
resistance heating and multi-phase extraction. 9th
Annual  International  Petroleum Environmental
Conference, October 22-25,  2002,  Albuquerque,
NM.  http://ipec.utulsa.edu/Conf2002/bevke flem
ing 130.pdf

Beyke, G. and D. Fleming. 2005. In situ thermal
remediation of DNAPL and LNAPL using electrical
resistance heating. Remediation, 15(3): 5-22. http://
www.thermalrs.com/TRS docs/ERH%20Rem
ediation%20 Journal %20article.pdf

Butherus,  M. et al.  2004. Project overview: Suc-
cessful field-scale in situ thermal NAPL remedi-
ation. Third International Conference on Oxidation
and Reduction Technologies for Soil and Ground-
water San  Diego,  CA,  October  24-28,  2004.
http://www.1m.doe.gov/documents/3_pro  doc/8
references/papers/2004 ORT Conference_paper.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2004. In Situ Thermal  Treatment  of
Chlorinated Solvents:  Fundamentals  and Field
Applications, EPA 542/R-04/010. Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response, 145 pp.  http://
www. cluin. org/download/remed/epa5 42r04010.pdf

3.3.2 Steam Injection and Extraction

Steam injection and extraction  (also known as steam
enhanced  extraction [SEE]) involves injection  of
                                               26

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steam  into  injection  wells and  the  recovery of
mobilized groundwater,  contaminants,  and vapor
from the recovery wells. Initially, when steam is
injected into the subsurface, it gives up its latent heat
of vaporization to the soil. As the steam loses heat, it
condenses into a hot water phase that moves  radially
into the soil and displaces air and water in front of it.
Continued input of steam eventually causes  the soil
near the well to reach steam temperatures, creating a
steam front that begins to propagate away from the
well. This process creates a moving front consisting
of ambient temperature water/air that is pushed by a
variable temperature zone of warm to very hot water.
The water in turn is pushed out by the pressure of the
steam moving into the steam temperature zone. The
movement of the ambient-temperature  water may
displace NAPLs, a process that is aided by viscosity
reduction when the hot water reaches the NAPL. The
arrival of the steam phase vaporizes compounds
remaining as residual saturation or adsorbed to the
soil. These vapors are transported to the leading edge
of the steam zone where they condense, forming a
contaminant condensate bank. The condensate bank
may have a tendency to sink, and it is important in the
design of the system to ensure its capture. Schmidt et
al. (2002) and Kaslusky and Udell (2002)  have found
that co-injection of air with the steam helps  prevent
downward contaminant migration.

Thus,  contaminant  removal  occurs by  several
mechanisms. Which one is most important in a given
situation depends on the volatility of the contaminant.
For VOCs, vaporization and co-boiling are the most
important  recovery mechanisms, while for SVOCs,
displacement as a NAPL and viscosity reduction may
be more important.  Recovery  wells  are  used to
capture both liquids and gases and transport  them to
a surface facility for treatment.

The applicability of steam injection to aparticular site
is determined by the permeability of the soil,  the
depth at which the contaminants reside, and the type
and degree of heterogeneity, as well as the contami-
nant type.  The permeability of the soil must  be high
enough to allow sufficient steam to be inj ected to heat
the entire source zone. Higher injection rates can be
achieved  by  increasing  the  injection pressure;
however, in  general, pressures should not be higher
than 1.65 pounds per square inch per meter of depth,
or the overburden pressure  will be exceeded, and
fracturing  to the  surface can be  expected  (Davis,
1998). Thus, shallow treatment areas are  difficult to
heat with steam,  and collection of all the vapors
generated may be challenging. An impermeable sur-
face cover may help in this regard.

Heterogeneity of the Subsurface and Soil Type

The soil type affects the ability of the steam to
remove contaminants in two ways. The permeability
determines how fast a steam front can move into and
through the soil.  Low permeability soil may not
allow steam to move through it at an economical rate
or may require unsupportable  pressures to do so.
The other aspect  of soil that affects contaminant
removal is its reactivity with contaminants. Silica
based  sands are  not particularly reactive,  and
contaminants can be removed easily. Smectite clays
and soil rich in organic matter both have the ability
to bind some organic compounds and prevent their
full removal at steam temperatures.

When there is heterogeneity, steam tends to channel
to the more permeable layer,  or  in  the case of
discontinuous layers, by-pass  the  less permeable
one. If this happens,  heating in the less permeable
soil usually is done by conductive methods. To fully
heat low permeability zones by conduction, steam
should  be injected  on  both  sides  of the  low
permeability zone, and the zone should be less than
about 10 feet in thickness.

Injection  and Extraction  Well Placement  and
Operation

The most effective design of steam injection and
extraction systems is to surround the contaminated
zone with four to  six injection  wells and to extract
the contaminants from the center. If the area to be
treated is large, repeating patterns of injection and
extraction wells may be used to  cover the entire area
(Davis 1998). The propagation  of the steam front is
a balance between the injection well's ability to add
heat and the surrounding soil's ability to absorb it.
When the rate of heat loss to the soil surrounding the
front equals the system's ability to input it, the steam
front will stop growing. The extraction well needs to
be  closer to  the injection well than this point of
equilibrium. Distances between wells have been re-
ported as close as 1.5 meters and as far apart as 18
meters.

The wells and couplings handle very hot streams of
vapors and their construction is a concern. Plastics,
such as PVC, are generally not appropriate, and steel
                                                27

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is typically used. Since the injection wells are both
very  hot  and  pressurized, couplings  should  be
carefully designed and an appropriate sealant for the
annulus should be chosen. Cement grouts used in
conventional water well completion may not with-
stand the pressure, heat, and expansion/contraction of
the well casing itself and could crack, causing the
release of steam to the surface.

A characteristic of steam treatment in a source zone
under saturated conditions that needs to be con-
sidered  is override. Override occurs when there is a
difference in density between two fluids (such as that
between steam and ambient temperature water). The
resulting interface tends to move the steam out and
up,  causing  the  top of the steam  front to  be
considerably further from the injection well than the
bottom. This situation can lead to untreated spots near
the bottom of the injection well. Override cannot be
completely eliminated, but it can be minimized within
the constraints of the site hydrogeology by using high
injection rates.

Pressure cycling of the steam injection is generally
utilized as part of the system operation. Cycling is the
process where, after breakthrough of steam at the
extraction wells, the steam injection system is shut
down while  allowing the  extraction process to
continue. The loss of pressure thermodynamically
destabilizes the system,  forcing the temperature to
drop to restore stability. The system loses heat by
evaporation  of residual  moisture and  the contami-
nants that are collected by the extraction wells. Davis
(1998) and Davis et al. (2005) report on several stud-
ies  where repeated cycling has resulted in increased
contaminant concentrations in the extracted vapors.

Steam is a well documented technology for addres-
sing NAPL  source zones  in  unconsolidated sub-
surfaces (Davis 1998). For example, over 150,000
gallons  of creosote  were destroyed or removed by
steam at the Southern California Edison Company
pole yard in Visalia, California. Several small scale,
short duration demonstrations of steam injection in
fractured rock  have shown the  potential for this
technology to be effective in fractured rock settings
(e.g., Loring Air Force Base, Davis et al. 2005), but
additional research and field demonstrations are
needed to fully determine its effectiveness. Because
of the sensitivity  of steam flow to heterogeneous
subsurface  conditions, more  site  characterization
efforts  may  be required than for other heating
technologies.
Another  steam delivery  system combines steam
injection with an in situ auger mixing system. In this
application,  steam  is  applied  through specially
designed augers while the soil is being mixed. The
steam  strips the  volatile contaminants from the
moving soil and brings them to  the surface, where
they are  captured in a shroud or bell device and
transported to a treatment  system. Moos (1998)
describes the use of an auger system at Argonne
National Laboratory to treat primarily chlorinated
solvent contaminated clays. The system  applied
steam and hot air injection to bring 70 to 80 percent
of the contaminants to the surface for treatment.
Following the steam application,  zero-valent iron
was mixed into the soil by the augers as a polishing
step. A similar steam system was used at the DOE
Pinellas site for remediating chlorinated hydrocar-
bon  hotspots.  It successfully  removed a  large
amount of the  contamination, but it was hampered
by  an undersized  offgas treatment system  that
probably prevented it from reaching site cleanup
goals (Davis 1998).

Cost data for  steam injection and extraction are
limited. U.S.  DOE (2000) reported cleanup at
approximately $39 per cubic yard, but their system
also employed electrical heating. The technology is
mature and well established; however, few vendors
use it for environmental remediation.

Cited and Other References

Alberti, L., et al. 2001. Detailed Addition Remedia-
tion  Planning  with Steam  Injection.  Integrated
Concept  for Groundwater  Remediation,  14 pp.
http://umweltwirtschaft-uw.de/incore/doku/
Steam%20Ini ection%20Milano .pdf

Davis, E. 1998. Steam Injection for Soil and Aquifer
Remediation, EPA 540/S-97/505. U.S. EPA, Office
of Research and Development, 16 pp. http://www.
epa. gov/tio/tsp/download/steaminj .pdf

Davis, E., et al. 2005. Steam Enhanced Remediation
Research for DNAPL in Fractured Rock, Loring Air
Force Base, Limestone, Maine, EPA 540/R-05/010.
U.S. EPA Office  of Research and Development.
http://www.epa.gov/ORD/NRMRL/pubs/540r05
010/540r05010.pdf

Heron,  G.,  S. Carroll,  and  S.  Nielsen.  2005.
Full-scale removal  of DNAPL  constituents using
                                               28

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steam-enhanced extraction and electrical resistance
heating. Ground Water Monitoring & Remediation
25(4):  97-107.  http://www.ce.berkelev.edu/~sitar/
ce274/Thermal%20remediation.pdf

Kaslusky, S.F. and K.S. Udell. 2002. A theoretical
model  of air and steam co-injection to prevent the
downward  migration  of DNAPLs  during  steam-
enhanced  extraction.  Journal  of  Contaminant
Hydrology 55:213-232.

Leif, R. et  al. 1998. In situ hydrothermal oxidative
destruction of DNAPLs in a creosote contaminated
site. The First International Conference on Remedia-
tion of Chlorinated and Recalcitrant Compounds
Monterey,  CA, May 18-21, 1998. http://www.llnl.
gov/tid/lof/documents/pdf/233527.pdf

Moos,   L.  1998.  Optimization  of soil  mixing
technology through metallic  iron addition. Tenth
National Technology Information Exchange (TIE)
Workshop, Willowbrook,  Illinois,  October 27-29,
1998, 120 pp.  http://www.osti.gov/energycitations/
servlets/purl/12366-7OlbU8/webviewable/12366.pdf

Schmidt, R., J. Gudbjerg, T.O. Sonnenborg, and K.H.
Jensen.  2002.  Removal   of NAPLs   from  the
unsaturated zone using steam: Prevention of down-
ward migration by injecting mixtures of steam and
air. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology 55: 233-260.

U.S. DOE. 2000. Innovative Technology Summary
Report:  Hydrous  Pyrolysis   Oxidation/Dynamic
Underground Stripping, DOE EM-05/04, 26  pp.
http://apps.em.doe.gov/OST/pubs/itsrs/itsrl519.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2003a. Cost and  Performance Report:
Dynamic Underground Stripping-Hydrous Pyrolysis
Oxidation at the Savannah River Site 321-M Solvent
Storage Tank Area, Aiken,  South Carolina. Office of
Solid Waste  and  Emergency Response, 12  pp.
http://costperformance.org/pdf/20030627 331 .pdf

U.S. EPA. 2003b. Cost and  Performance Report:
Steam  Enhanced  Extraction  at the A.G.  Com-
munications Systems Site, Northlake, Illinois. Office
of Solid Waste and Emergency  Response,  10  pp.
http://costperformance.org/pdf/20030625 326.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2004.  In  Situ Thermal Treatment  of
Chlorinated  Solvents:  Fundamentals  and  Field
Applications, EPA 542/R-04/010. Office of Solid
Waste  and Emergency Response, 145 pp.  http://
www.cluin.org/download/remed/epa542r04010.pdf

3.3.3 Conductive Heating

Conductive heating uses either an array of vertical
heater/vacuum wells or, when the treatment area is
within  about six inches of the ground  surface,
surface heater blankets. While it is feasible to deploy
all the  wells in a heater/vacuum mode, the typical
deployment is to place six heater-only wells in a
hexagonal  shape with a heater  vacuum  well
occupying the center of each hexagon.

The  wells can be  installed  using conventional
drilling techniques or direct push. Heater wells are
constructed of steel pipe with the base sealed. A
resistive heating unit is lowered into the well and
current is  supplied. The heating element typically
operates at temperatures between 540° and 815°C
(Baker and Heron 2004). The steel pipe is heated by
radiant energy and the soil surrounding it by thermal
conductance.

The vacuum well contains  the same steel pipe and
heating element components as a standard heater
well, but it is placed within  a larger screened well to
which a vacuum can be applied. Heat propagates in
a cylindrical fashion from the well outward. The
heating is fairly even through all dry textures of soil.
The hottest soil (typically 590°C) is in the immediate
vicinity of the wells, while the coolest soil is at the
midpoint  between wells.  When  the  vacuum is
applied to the center well,  volatilized organics are
pulled  through the high-temperature soil, where
some of the contaminants may be degraded (Baker
and Heron 2004). The extracted vapors are trans-
ported to the surface for treatment.

Well spacing is chosen based on contaminant type
and depth, soil moisture  content, the minimum
required temperature between wells, and the time
desired to reach that temperature (U.S. EPA 2004).
SVOCs, including high boiling components, such as
PAHs or PCBs, generally need a soil temperature of
325°C for adequate desorption, while VOCs require
less heat (usually 100°C) (Baker and Heron 2004).
The ability to treat high-boiling contaminants at
temperatures well  below  their  boiling points is
largely due  to the significant increase in vapor
pressures  at  the  temperatures  present  and  the
relatively  long residence time  in  a very  hot
                                               29

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subsurface (Biershenk et al. 2004).The temperature
requirements  typically  lead  to well  placement
distances of 6 to 7.5 feet for the SVOCs and 12 to 20
feet  for the VOCs. As with electrical resistance
heating, the closer the wells, the faster the desired
temperatures are reached.

Conductive heating operates best in unsaturated soil;
however, it does find application in saturated  soil
with low hydraulic conductivity. As the temperature
around the heater wells increases, the water evapo-
rates and a "dry" zone is created that expands out-
ward. At the leading edge of this cylindrical zone,
steam is created, which further expands the zone. In
low permeability soil, any replacement water that
attempts to flow into the "dry" zone is quickly boiled
off. In soil with high hydraulic conductivities, the
influx of water to replace that boiling off may be
sufficient to prevent the  soil from  exceeding the
boiling point of water, and target temperatures may
not be met. If the treatment area contains saturated
high hydraulic conductivity soil, then a dewatering
system should be considered, or Baker and Heron
(2004) suggest using a steam system to control water
influx, as well  as sweeping the permeable areas.
Drying soils, especially fine-grained silt and clay, at
high temperatures  can  result  in  shrinkage  and
cracking that will promote the removal of organics
contained within them (U.S. EPA 2004).

If concentrated  halogenated   organics   are  the
contaminants of concern, the system—both piping
and treatment—must be designed to withstand highly
corrosive conditions.

Thermal conductance systems also can consume large
quantities of power. At a site in Alhambra, California,
the remediation had to be carried out in phases to
avoid exceeding the capacity  of the local power
supplier (Biershenk et al. 2004).

Vendor cost estimates cited range from $100 to $250
per ton  (NAVFAC 1999). TerraTherm has  an
exclusive license in the United  States to offer this
technology for remediation.

Cited and Other References

Baker, R. and M. Kuhlman. 2002. A description of
the mechanisms of in-situ thermal destruction (ISTD)
reactions. 2nd International Conf. on Oxidation and
Reduction Technologies for Soil and Groundwater,
ORTs-2, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Nov.  17-21,
2002, 10pp. http://www.terratherm.com/resources/
TechPapers/ORTs-2%20Baker%20and%20
Kuhlman.pdf

Baker, R.S. and G. Heron. 2004. In-situ delivery of
heat by thermal conduction and steam injection for
improved DNAPL remediation. Proceedings of the
4th  International  Conf.   on  Remediation  of
Chlorinated and Recalcitrant Compounds, Monterey,
CA, May  24-27, 2004. Battelle, Columbus, OH.
http://www.terratherm.com/resources/TechPapers/
Terratherm%20Deliverv%20of%20Heat%20Paper
%20-%20Monterev.pdf

Bierschenk, J. et al. 2004. Full-scale phase la results
of ISTD remediation at former Alhambra, California
wood treatment site.  Proceedings of  the  4th
International Conf. on Remediation of Chlorinated
and Recalcitrant Compounds, Monterey, CA, May
24-27, 2004. Battelle, Columbus, OH. http://www.
terratherm.com/resources/TechPapers/Terratherm
%20Paper%20499%20-%20Monterev.pdf

Conley, D., K. Hansen, G. Stegemeier, H. Vinegar,
F. Fossati, F. Carl, and H.  Clough. 2000. In situ
thermal   desorption  of  refined  petroleum
hydrocarbons  from  saturated   soil.  In:   G.D.
Wickramanayake and A.R. Gavaskar (eds.) Physical
and Thermal Technologies: Remediation of Chlori-
nated and Recalcitrant Compounds.  Battelle Press,
Columbus,  OH,  pp.  197-206.   http://www.terra
therm.com/resources/TechPapers/Conlev-
Hydrocarbons .pdf

NAVFAC. 1999. Cost and Performance Report: In-
Situ Thermal Desorption at the Former Mare Island
Naval Shipyard, 21 pp. http://costperformance.org/
pdf/Marelsland.pdf

U.S. EPA. 1997. Analysis of Selected Enhancements
for Soil Vapor  Extraction, EPA 542/R-97/007.
Office of Solid Waste and  Emergency Response,
246  pp.   http://www.cluin.org/download/remed/
sveenhmt.pdf

U.S. EPA. 2004. Innovative Technology Evaluation:
Field Evaluation of TerraTherm  In Situ Thermal
Destruction (ISTD) Treatment of Hexachlorocyclo-
pentadiene, EPA 540/R-05/007. Office of Research
and Development,  183  pp.  http://www.epa.gov/
ORD/NRMRL/pubs/540r05007/540r05007.htm
                                              30

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3.3.4Radio-Frequency Heating

Radio-frequency  heating  (RFH)  uses  a  high
frequency alternating electric field for in situ heating
of soils. The technique depends on the presence of
dielectric   materials  with  unevenly   distributed
electrical charges. The application of an electric field
produces movement of the "polar" molecules, and
this vibration creates mechanical heat. A spread of
radio frequencies (e.g., 6.78 MHz, 13.56 MHz, 27.12
MHz,  and 40.68 MHz along  with  seven  higher
frequencies) regulated and assigned by the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC)  can be used in
industrial, scientific, or medical applications. Under
47 CFR18.301 (FCC 2006) an equipment designer or
operator can use these frequencies without obtaining
a license from the FCC. Higher frequencies increase
the rate of heating but reduce the depth of penetration
(Halliburton NUS Environmental 1995).

A radio-frequency heating system usually consists of:
•   A three-phase power supply.
•   A radio-frequency source with an oscillator that
    generates a low-power current at  the desired
    radio  frequency,  several serial amplifiers that
    increase the strength of the oscillator current, and
    a final amplifier that delivers the current at the
    prescribed output level.
•   An applicator system consisting of electrodes or
    antennae.
•   A monitoring control system.
•   A grounded metal shield over the treatment area.
•   A  vapor   collection  and  treatment  system
    (Haliburton NUS Environmental 1995).

Depending upon the vendor,  a  row  or  rows of
applicator electrodes are placed  in the ground to the
depth of the treatment zone. The electrodes can be
placed with conventional drilling equipment or direct
push. In some designs, the  electrodes themselves are
used to recover soil gas and heated vapors. In other
designs, wells are placed specifically for soil vapor
extraction  and  to act as  electromagnetic  sinks to
prevent heating beyond the treatment zone (Figure 5).
Heating is  both radiative and conductive, with soil
near the applicator electrodes  heating fastest (the
radio frequency wave gets weaker the further from
the electrode due to energy absorption).

At the  oscillation frequencies of the applied electro-
magnetic field, water generally  acquires the largest
dipole  moment of any of the soil constituents before
the polarity  of the  field reverses. As the water
content falls, the heating relies on other polar parts
of the soil. Careful consideration should be given to
purely sandy soils as to whether RFH is applicable.
Silica sand is non-polar, and heating in sand must
rely  on  impurities present (Iben, Edelstein,  and
Roemer 1996). Also, the drier a soil becomes the
more difficult it is to move organic gas through it.
Conversely, too much water becomes a heat sink. In
saturated conditions, RFH boils the water in the
immediate vicinity of the applicator electrode  and
does  not heat the treatment zone to a  useful tem-
perature. If the water table is shallow, dewatering
techniques may need to be applied (Edelstein et al.
1996 and Davis 1997).

The antenna method places vapor recovery wells
around  the  treatment  area.  Drilled  or  pushed
applicator  boreholes on site-specific  spacing are
lined with a fiberglass casing or other nonconductive
non-polar material that will withstand  the temper-
atures expected. The antenna are lowered into the
applicator  holes to an appropriate depth, and the
heating is  begun. The antenna can be lowered or
raised as desired.
                                         On-Site
                                      Vapor Recovery
                                      and Treatment
Figure 5. Radio-Frequency Heating with Electrodes
 Both antenna and electrode systems monitor the heat
 distribution in the subsurface (usually with thermo-
 couples, but other devices can be used) to ensure
 target temperatures  are  obtained throughout the
 treatment area. Depending upon  the chemicals of
 concern, RFH can obtain temperatures over 250°C
 with some vendors claiming temperatures to 400°C
 (Davis 1997 and U.S. EPA 1997). These tempera-
                                                31

-------
tures allow the system to treat both VOCs and many
SVOCs. Also  monitored  is the impedance of the
applicator system and the  impedance of the subsur-
face soil. As the soil is heated, its impedance changes.
If the applicator system impedance is not adjusted to
match it, energy reflects back at the system, resulting
in heating and potential failure.

The vapor extraction system consists of conventional
vapor  extraction  wells.   Also,  for  safety  and
prevention of potential interference with local radio
transmissions,  a grounded metal shield is usually
employed over, and just beyond, the treatment area.
Metal structures are very  efficient at absorbing RF
energy and preventing it from escaping the treatment
zone. For this reason,  RFH is  not applicable for
treatment  zones that  contain  metal  or  other
conductive objects.  Both antenna and electrode
technologies were demonstrated by the EPA SITE
program in 1994 (U.S. EPA  1995a & 1995b and
Haliburton NUS Environmental 1995).

Only the antenna system is currently offered, and that
by one vendor.

Cited and Other References

Brody, K., A.  Kabir, H. J. Cho, R. Fiacco, Jr., J.
McTigue, M. Daly, and R. Kasevich. 2004. Imple-
menting RF heating in fractured bedrock to remediate
TCA DNAPL.  2004 Fractured  Rock  Conference:
State  of the  Science and Measuring  Success in
Remediation, Portland, ME, September 13-15,10 pp.
http://clu-in.org/products/siteprof/2004fracrock
conf/cdr_pdfs/indexed/groupl/034.pdf

Davis,  E. 1997. Ground Water Issue: How Heat Can
Enhance In-Situ Soil and Aquifer Remediation:
Important Chemical  Properties  and Guidance  on
Choosing  the  Appropriate  Technique,   EPA
540/S-97/502.  U.S. EPA., Office of Research and
Development,  18 pp.  http://www.cluin.org/down
load/remed/heatenh.pdf

Edelstein, W. et al. 1996.  Radiofrequency Ground
Heating System for Soil Remediation, Patent Number
5,484,985. General  Electric  Company,   http://
patftl.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sectl=PTOl&
Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p= 1 &u=%2Fnetahtml%2
FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=l&f=G&l=50&sl =
5.484.985.PN.&OS=PN/5.484.985&RS=PN/5.484.
985
FCC. 2006. Code of Federal  Regulations:  Title
47-Telecommunication Chapter I-Federal Com-
munications Commission Part 18-Industrial, Scien-
tific, and Medical Equipment.  http://www.access.
gpo.gov/nara/cfr/waisidx 05/47cfrl8 05.html

Haliburton NUS Environmental Corporation. 1995.
Installation Restoration Program Technical Eval-
uation Report for the Demonstration of Radio Fre-
quency Soil Decontamination at Site S-l. U.S. Air
Force Center for Environmental Excellence, 1,298
pp. http://www.osti.gov/bridge/purl.cover .jsp?purl
=/146796-ze58o8/webviewable/

Iben, I.,  W.  Edelstein, and  P.  Roemer. 1996.
Technical Information Series: Dielectric Properties
of Soil: Application to Radio Frequency Ground
Heating,   96CRD150.   GE  Research  and
Development Center, 37 pp. http://www.crd.ge.com/
cooltechnologies/pdf/1996crdl50.pdf

U.S.  EPA.   1995a.   Innovative  Technology
Evaluation Report: IITRI Radio Frequency Heating
Technology, EPA 540/R-94/527. Office of Research
and Development, 162 pp. http://nepis.epa.gov/pub
titleOSWER.htm

U.S.  EPA.   1995b.   Innovative  Technology
Evaluation Report: Radio Frequency Heating, KAI
Technologies, Inc, EPA 540/R-94/528.  Office of
Research and Development, 168 pp. http://nepis.
epa.gov/pubtitleOSWER.htm

U.S. EPA. 1997. Analysis of Selected Enhancements
for Soil  Vapor  Extraction,  EPA  542/R-97/007.
Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response,
246  pp.    http://www.cluin.org/download/remed/
sveenhmt.pdf

3.3.5 In Situ Vitrification

In situ vitrification (ISV) is a thermal treatment pro-
cess that converts contaminated soil to stable glass
and crystalline solids.  There are two methods for
producing heat for melting the contaminated soil.
The  older method uses electrodes and electrical
resistance to vitrify  materials, while the emerging
technique uses plasma arc technology.

In the electrical resistance method, high voltage is
applied to electrodes (typically four) placed in the
soil. Starter frit (generally graphite) is placed on the
soil surface and electrical current heats the soil from
the top down to  temperatures between 1,400 and
                                              32

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2,000°C. Typical melt sizes range from 200 to 1,200
tons, with a processing rate of four to six tons per
hour (U.S. EPA 1995). Maximum treatment depth is
approximately 20 feet in a single setup. The process
depends upon the presence of 1.4 to 15 percent alkali
metal oxides in the material to be treated to ensure a
proper balance between electrical conductivity and
melting temperature. Too much alkali metal content
increases  the  conductivity  to a  point  where
insufficient heating occurs.

If the silica content of the soil is sufficiently high,
contaminated  soil can  be converted  into  glass.
Heating vaporizes or pyrolyzes organic contaminants.
Most inorganic contaminants are encased in the glass-
like monolith that  results when the soil cools after
treatment. The system  requires  a vapor hood  that
traps offgases and channels them to a treatment train
that generally consists of a quencher to cool the 100°
to 400°C gases and, depending upon what is being
treated, a scrubber, activated carbon unit, or thermal
oxidizer (U.S. EPA 1997a). The scrubber and quench
water may require secondary treatment.

The conventional ISV process can destroy or remove
organics and immobilize most inorganics in contami-
nated soil,  sludge, or other earthen materials  The
process has been used on a broad range of VOCs and
SVOCs, other organics including dioxins and PCBs,
and   on   most  priority  pollutant  metals   and
radionuclides (http: //www. frtr. gov/).
Mercury  is  not  captured in  the
vitrified soil and therefore must be
treated  by  the  above  ground
treatment system. The majority (70
to 99.9 percent by weight) of heavy
metals,  such  as  arsenic,  lead,
cadmium,  and   chromium,  and
radionuclides  are  entrained  in  the
melt mass  (Thompson, Bates and
Hansen 1992). SVOCs  and VOCs
can be treated with this process, with
about  97  percent of  the  VOCs
de stroy ed and the remainder captured
by the offgas treatment system (U.S.
EPA  1997a).  ISV is applicable to
sites with high clay and moisture
content, although treatment costs increase with in-
creasing moisture content. Treatment of materials in
a permeable aquifer may require dewatering,  and if
the treatment area is expected to contain large voids,
dynamic  compaction is recommended (U.S.  EPA
1997a).
               ISV, using the electrical resistance method, has been
               tested in the field several times, including a SITE
               Program  demonstration  (U.S.  EPA   1995),  a
               demonstration  at  the  DOE Hanford Nuclear
               Reservation (http ://www.frtr. gov/) and  Superfund
               cleanups at the Wasatch Chemical Company, Lot 6
               site (U.S. EPA 1997b) and General Electric Spokane
               Shop (U.S. EPA 2005).  Costs  are  estimated at
               $400/ton (U.S. EPA  1997a).  The technology is
               licensed to only one vendor.

               Planar melting is a modification of the conventional
               ISV method. It differs in that the starter material is
               injected in a vertical plane between  electrodes at
               depth. Generally, two electrode pairs are used with
               a  starter plane between each pair.  As the  melt
               proceeds, it grows vertically and horizontally away
               from  the  starter planes.  Because  the  melts are
               initially  separated and only merge late  in the
               process, the potential for driving gases down into the
               formation  is  greatly  reduced as compared  with
               conventional ISV (Figure 6). The maximum estab-
               lished treatment depth is 26 feet, but deeper melts
               are theoretically possible. The cost of the process is
               estimated at between  $355 and  $460 per ton
               (Thompson 2002). A successful field demonstration
               of the planar technique was carried out at the Los
               Alamos National Laboratory in 2000 (Coel-Roback
               et al. 2003).
    Source: Gcosafe Coip.
Figure 6. Planar Vitrification—Melting from the Bottom
               In situ vitrification using plasma arc technology has
               been  demonstrated  at the DOE Savannah River
               Complex (Blundy and Zionkowski 1997) but has yet
               to reach commercialization. The process consists of
               lowering a plasma arc torch  into a cased hole and
               initiating  a columnar melt  from the  bottom up.
                                               33

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Offgases are collected in a hood and treated by a
system similar to the electrode method. The torch can
achieve temperatures exceeding 7,000°C, and theo-
retically, it can operate at any  depth. Melts can be
initiated below the contaminated area to ensure all
contamination is addressed. Since a full-scale demon-
stration has yet to be done, cost  data are unavailable.

Cited and Other References

Blundy, R. and P. Zionkowski. 1997. Final Report:
Demonstration of Plasma In Situ Vitrification at the
904-65G K-Reactor Seepage Basin, WSRC-RP-97-
405. Westinghouse Savannah River Company, 192
pp. http://www.osti.gov/bridge/purl.cover.jsp?purl=
/626442-vswIVz/webviewable/

Coel-Roback, B., P.  Lowery, M.  Springer,  L.
Thompson, and G. Huddleston. 2003. Non-traditional
in situ vitrification—A technology  demonstration at
Los Alamos   National  Laboratory.   WM'03
Conference, February 23 - 27, 2003, Tucson, AZ, 12
pp.   http://www.wmsym.org/abstracts/2003/pdfs/
460.pdf

FRTR.  2006 (November).  Federal  Remediation
Technologies Roundtable website: http://www.frtr.
gov//matrix2/section4/4-8 .html

Schumacher, R.F. 1996. Georgia Tech Final Report:
Demonstration   In   Situ  Plasma  Vitrification
Technology for Savannah River Site Contaminated
Soils.  U.S.  Department  of  Energy,   147  pp.
http://www.osti.gov/bridge/product.biblio.jsp?
osti  id=656899

Thompson, L.,  S.  Bates,  and J.  Hansen.  1992.
Technology  Status Report: In Situ Vitrification
Applied  to  Buried  Wastes,  PNL-8219.  Pacific
Northwest Laboratory.

Thompson, L.  2002.  Mixed waste treatment cost
analyses for a range of Geomelt vitrification process
configurations. WM'02 Conference, February 24-28,
2002, Tucson, AZ. 13  pp. http://www.wmsym.org/
Abstracts/2002/Proceedings/39B/323.pdf

U.S. EPA. 1994a.  Engineering Bulletin: In Situ
Vitrification Treatment, EPA 540/S-94/504. Office of
Emergency and Remedial Response, 8 pp.  http://
nepis. epa. gov/pubtitle O SWER.htm
U.S. EPA. 1994b. SITE Demonstration Bulletin: In
Situ Vitrification Geosafe Corporation, EPA 540/
MR-94/520. Office of Research and Development,
2 pp. http: //nepis. epa. gov/pubtitle O SWER.htm

U.S. EPA. 1995. Geosafe  Corporation In  Situ
Vitrification  Innovative  Technology Evaluation
Report, EPA 540/R-94/520. Office of Research and
Development, 148 pp.  http://www.epa.gov/ORD/
SITE/reports/540r94520/540r94520.htm

U.S. EPA. 1997a.  Innovative Site Remediation
Design and Application, Volume 4: Stabilization/
Solidification, EPA 542/B-97/007. Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response, 234 pp.  http://
nepisepa.gov/pubtitleOSWER.htm

U.S. EPA.  1997b.  Wasatch Chemical  Company
Superfund Site: Five-Year Review Report,  http://
cfpub.epa.gov/fivevear/index.cfm?fuseaction=
home.showSearchForm

U.S. EPA. 2005. NPL Sites in Region 10.  http://
vosemite.epa.gov/rlO/cleanup.nsf/webpage/
Washington+Cleanup+Sites
4.0 Notice,  Disclaimer,  and  Acknowledg-
    ments

This document  has  been prepared  for the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency under Contract
Number 68-W-03-038. This report has undergone
EPA review. Mention of trade names or commercial
products  does  not  constitute endorsement  or
recommendation for use.

Special acknowledgement is given to the remedi-
ation professionals for their review and thoughtful
suggestions to support the preparation of this docu-
ment,  including  the  following:  Carolyn Acheson
(EPA  ORD), Frank Bales (USAGE), Harold Ball
(EPA  Region  9), Ed Earth (EPA ORD), Ed Bates
(EPA  ORD), Dave Becker (USAGE), Terry Burton
(EPA  ORD), Jim Cummings (EPA OSWER), Eva
Davis (EPA ORD), Carol Dona (USAGE), Ed
Feltcorn (EPA  OAR), Robert Ford  (EPA ORD),
Michael Gill (EPA ORD), Richard Griffith (EPA
ORD), Scott Ruling (EPA ORD),  Steve Kinser
(EPA  Region  7), Gene Keepper (EPA Region 6),
Lindsey Lein  (USAGE), Kelly Madalinski (EPA
OSWER), Ed Mead (USAGE), Randy Parker (EPA
ORD), David Reisman (EPA ORD), Marta Richards
                                             34

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(EPA ORD),  Hugh Rieck (USAGE), Steve Rock
(EPA ORD),  Bill Rothenmeyer (EPA Region 8),
Ellen Rubin (EPA OSWER), Michelle Simon (EPA
ORD), and Stuart Walker (EPA OSWER).
5.0 Abbreviations and Acronyms

AFCEE   Air  Force  Center for  Environmental
          Excellence
BTEX    benzene, toluene, ethyl benzene, xylene
C         centigrade
CB       chlorobenzenes
CH2C12    dichloromethane or methylene chloride
CHC13    trichloromethane or chloroform
Cr        chromium
CT       carbon tetrachloride
CVOC    chlorinated volatile organic compound
DCA      dichloroethane
DCE      dichloroethene
DDT      dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane
DNAPL   dense nonaqueous phase liquid
DP       direct push
ERH      electrical resistance heating
FCC      Federal Communications Commission
FRTR    Federal  Remediation   Technologies
          Roundtable
H2        hydrogen gas
ISV       in situ vitrification
MNA     monitored natural attenuation
MPE      multi-phase extraction
MTBE    methyl tert-butyl ether
NAPL    nonaqueous phase liquid
NAS      National Academy of Sciences
NAVFAC Naval Facilities Engineering Command
NPL      National Priority List
OAR     Office of Air and Radiation
OH"      hydroxide
ORD     Office of Research and Development
OSWER  Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
          Response
PAHs     polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
PCB      polychlorinated biphenyl
PCE      perchloroethene or tetrachloroethene
PCP      pentachlorophenol
ppm      parts per million
PVC      polyvinyl chloride
RFH      radio-frequency heating
SCM     site conceptual model
SEAR    surfactant-enhanced aquifer remediation
SEE      steam enhanced extraction
SITE     Superfund   Innovative  Technology
          Evaluation
SOD      soil oxidant demand
S/S       solidification/stabilization
SVOCs    semivolatile organic  compounds
SVE      soil vapor extraction
TCA      trichloroethane
TCE      trichloroethene
TCLP     Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Pro-
          cedure
USAGE   United States Army Corps of Engineers
U.S. DoD United States Department of Defense
U.S. DOE United States Department of Energy
U.S. EPA  United State s Environmental Protection
          Agency
VC       vinyl chloride
VOCs     volatile  organic compounds
                                             35

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