I
55
V
O
T
.0*
Treatment Technologies
For 1,4-Dioxane:
Fundamentals And Field Applications
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Office of Solid Waste EPA-542-R-06-009
and Emergency Response December 2006
(5203P) www.epa.gov/tio
http://clu-in.org
Treatment Technologies for 1,4-Dioxane:
Fundamentals and Field Applications
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CONTENTS
Section Page
ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ii
FOREWORD iv
NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER v
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS v
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ES-1
1.0 INTRODUCTION 1-1
1.1 Overview of Dioxane Production and Environmental Occurrence 1-2
1.2 Properties and Behavior of Dioxane in the Environment 1-3
1.3 Characterization of Dioxane 1-4
1.4 Cleanup Goals and Standards 1-5
2.0 TREATMENT OF MEDIA CONTAINING DIOXANE 2-1
2.1 Treatment Technologies for Dioxane in Water 2-1
2.1.1 Advanced Oxidation (Ex Situ) 2-1
2.1.2 Adsorption (GAC) (Ex Situ) 2-5
2.1.3 Bioremediation 2-5
2.2 Treatment of Dioxane in Soil 2-6
2.3 Ongoing Research on Dioxane Treatment 2-6
3.0 REFERENCES 3-1
APPENDIX A INTERNET SOURCES FOR SUMMARY OF SELECTED U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY AND STATE GUIDANCE FOR DIOXANE IN SOIL AND
WATER A-l
EXHIBITS
Exhibit Page
1 Process and Product Uses of Dioxane 1-2
2 2002 Toxics Release Inventory Data for Dioxane and 1,1,1-Trichloroethane
(all amounts in pounds) 1-3
3 Molecular Structure of Dioxane 1-4
4 Properties of Dioxane and 1,1,1-Trichloroethane 1-4
5 Summary of Selected U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and State Guidance for Dioxane in
Soil and Water (as of January 2005) 1-6
6 Process Flow Diagram of a Typical Ozone/Hydrogen Peroxide Groundwater Treatment
System 2-2
7 Summary of Full- and Pilot-Scale Treatment Projects for 1-4 Dioxane in Groundwater 2-7
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ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
(.ig/L Micrograms per liter
AFB Air Force Base
AOP Advanced oxidation process
APT Applied Process Technology, Inc.
ART Accelerated Remediation Technologies, LLC
atm Atmosphere
ATSDR Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
CLU-IN EPA Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information Web site
DCE Dichloroethene
EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
FRTR Federal Remediation Technologies Roundtable
g Grams
GAC Granular activated carbon
GC Gas chromatography
gpm Gallon per minute
GRAC Groundwater Resources Association of California
IARC International Agency for Research on Cancer
IRIS Integrated Risk Information System
KQW Octanol-water partition coefficient
L Liter
Log KQW Log of the octanol-water partition coefficient
mg Milligrams
mg/kg Milligrams per kilogram
mg/kg/day Milligrams per kilogram per day
mg/L Milligrams per liter
mg/mj Milligrams per cubic meter
mL Milliliter
mm Hg Millimeters of mercury
MS Mass spectrometry
ND Non detect
NPDES National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
OSFtA Occupational Safety and Health Administration
PEL Permissible exposure limit
ppm Parts per million
PRG Preliminary remediation goal
ROD Record of decision
SERDP Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program
SIM Selected ion monitoring
SLAC Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
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TCA Trichloroethane
TCE Trichloroethylene
TRI Toxics Release Inventory
USAGE U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
USDHHS U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
UV Ultraviolet
VOC Volatile organic compound
m
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FOREWORD
1,4-Dioxane is a solvent stabilizer frequently found at contaminated sites where methyl chloroform
(1,1,1-trichloroethane) was used for degreasing. This report profiles the occurrence and properties of 1,4-
dioxane and provides a summary of the available remedial technologies. The information presented
should prove useful to project managers and other regulatory officials who oversee cleanup of
contaminated groundwater, particularly where chlorinated solvents are the principal contaminant.
Consultants, including hydrogeologists, remediation engineers, and modelers, should also find this report
useful, as should water utility operators and regulators.
In recent years, the regulated community has become increasingly aware that 1,4-dioxane is likely to be
present at sites where methyl chloroform is a contaminant. Although 1,4-dioxane has been a constituent
of methyl chloroform wastes for decades, recent improvements to analytical methods allowed its
detection in the parts per billion range beginning in 1997. Analysis of 1,4-dioxane often must be
specifically requested. The common practice of analyzing by a limited list of available methods for
regulatory compliance has precluded detection of 1,4-dioxane.
The properties that made 1,4-dioxane difficult to analyze in the past also make it difficult to treat. For
example, 1,4-dioxane is fully miscible in water. As ahydrophilic contaminant, it is not, therefore,
amenable to the conventional ex situ treatment technologies used for chlorinated solvents. Successful
remedial technologies must take into account the challenging chemical and physical properties unique to
1,4-dioxane. This report profiles technologies that have been shown to successfully remove or eliminate
1,4-dioxane and examines other technologies currently under development.
1,4-Dioxane is among the most mobile organic contaminants in the saturated zone. As a result, it may be
found farther downgradient than the leading edge of a solvent plume. The combination of a wider spatial
occurrence and different requirements for treatment technologies make 1,4-dioxane a potentially
problematic contaminant, particularly if it is discovered after site characterization and remedial design
have already been completed. In some cases, discovery of 1,4-dioxane has necessitated expanded
monitoring networks, larger capture zones, and the addition of new treatment technologies to the
treatment train.
Treatment Technologies for 1,4-Dioxane: Fundamentals and Field Applications should prove useful to
all site managers faced with addressing 1,4-dioxane at a cleanup site or in drinking water supplies and to
those in a position to consider whether 1.4-dioxane should be added to the analytical suite for site
investigation.
IV
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NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER
This report has been funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Office of Superfund
Remediation and Technology Innovation (OSRTI) under Contract Number 68-W-02-034. Information in
this report is derived from numerous sources, including personal communications with experts in the
field. Not all the source documents have been peer reviewed. This report has undergone EPA and
external review by subject-matter experts. Mention of trade names or commercial products does not
constitute endorsement or recommendation for use.
If you have questions about this report, please contact Martha Otto. EPA OSRTI. at (703) 603-8853 or
otto .marthai'fflepa. gov.
A portable document format (pdf) version of Treatment Technologies for 1.4-Dioxane: Fundamentals
and Field Applications may be viewed or downloaded at the Hazardous Waste Clean-up Information
(CLU-IN) system Web site at http://clu-in.org/542R06009. A limited number of printed copies are
available free of charge and may be ordered via the Web site, by mail, or by fax from:
EPA/National Service Center for Environmental Publications
P.O. Box 42419
Cincinnati, OH 45242-2419
Telephone: (800)490-9198
Fax: (301)604-3408
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Special acknowledgement is given to the federal and state staff and other remediation professionals who
provided information for this document. Their willingness to share their expertise on treatment
technologies for 1,4-dioxane encourages the successful application of these technologies at other sites.
Contributors to the report included EPA OSRTI, EPA Office of Solid Waste, EPA Office of Research and
Development, EPA Office of Drinking Water, EPA Office of Prevention, Pesticides, and Toxic
Substances, EPA Office of Emergency Management, EPA Groundwater Forum, Thomas Mohr of the
Santa Clara Valley Water District of California, Reid Bowman of Applied Process Technology, Inc., John
Horst of ARCADIS, Charles Drewry of Calgon Carbon Corporation, and Rula Deeb and Christine Cotton
of Malcolm Pirnie, Inc. Additional acknowledgment is given to Thomas Mohr for authoring the foreword
to the report.
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The cyclic ether 1,4-dioxane is a synthetic
industrial chemical that is used as a solvent in
products such as paints and lacquers and in
processes such as organic chemical manufacturing.
It was used in the past primarily with 1,1,1-
trichloroethane (TCA), as a stabilizer and
corrosion inhibitor, and has proven to be a
contaminant of concern (a contaminant that poses
a human health or environmental risk) at sites
contaminated with TCA. It is a probable
carcinogen and has been found in groundwater at
sites throughout the United States. The physical
and chemical properties and behavior of 1,4-
dioxane create challenges for its characterization
and treatment. It is highly mobile and has not
been shown to readily biodegrade in the
environment.
Groundwater investigations at solvent release sites
have not typically included 1,4-dioxane as a target
analyte because it was not detectable at low
concentrations in a standard laboratory scan for
volatile organic compounds. In addition, it was
traditionally not regarded as a contaminant of
concern. As a result, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and many states have
not promulgated cleanup levels that would
mandate characterization or remediation of 1,4-
dioxane at contaminated sites. Currently, no
federal drinking water standard exists for 1,4-
dioxane. Recent analytical improvements,
however, have now made it possible for 1,4-
dioxane to be detected at concentrations similar to
other volatile organic compounds. As a result,
based on a review of the risks posed, some states
have now established enforceable cleanup goals
for 1,4-dioxane. For example, in September 2004,
Colorado became the first state to establish an
enforceable standard for dioxane in groundwater
and surface water. This standard is being phased
in and requires facilities to have met a 6.1
micrograms per liter ((.ig/L) limit by March 2005
and a 3.2 (.ig/L limit by March 2010.
This report provides fundamental information
about 1,4-dioxane and field applications of viable
treatment technologies to remove this contaminant
from groundwater. 1,4-Dioxane's high solubility,
low potential to partition from the dissolved phase
Key Findings:
• 1,4-Dioxane was used primarily in the past as a
stabilizer in chlorinated solvents. It is now
Used for a wide variety of industrial purposes.
• 1,4-Dioxane is hydrophilic, is only minimally
retarded in groundwater; and is not prone to
sorption to soil. It is a good candidate for jiji
pump-and-treat remediation using ex situ
treatment technologies tailored for its unique
\ \ \ properties.
;» A total of 15projects were identified where |
1,4-dioxane was treated in groundwater,
Twelve of the 15 projects used ex situ advanced
oxidation processes.
• Research is being conducted on technologies
such as bioremediation and phytoremediation to
assess their capability to treat 1,4-dioxane.
to vapor, and its low affinity for organic matter in
soil combine to favor its occurrence dissolved in
groundwater. As a result, treatment of 1,4-dioxane
in soil is not commonly implemented and site-
specific examples of soil treatment were not
identified in the research conducted. However, a
brief discussion is provided on potential
technologies to treat soil contaminated with 1,4-
dioxane.
This report focuses on treatment of contaminated
groundwater. The report includes an overview of
topics related to 1,4-dioxane, including its
occurrence, physical and chemical properties, and
treatability, as well as relevant policy and
guidance. In addition, site-specific information
about treatment of 1,4-dioxane is provided, as is
information on technologies that show promise in
treating 1,4-dioxane in the future.
Project managers, technology providers,
consulting engineers, and members of academia
can use this information to gain a better
understanding of current treatment practices and
the potential for new treatment technologies. This
report includes information from EPA documents,
journal articles, conference proceedings, and
discussions with experts in remediation of 1,4-
dioxane.
ES-1
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1.0 INTRODUCTION
This report provides fundamental information
about 1,4-dioxane and field applications of
technologies that can treat this contaminant in
groundwater. Treatment of soil contaminated with
1,4-dioxane is also briefly discussed. References
cited in bold type refer to peer-reviewed journal
articles.
Synonyms for 1,4-dioxane are dioxane,/>-dioxane,
diethylene ether, diethylene dioxide, and glycol
ethyiene ether. Dioxane was used primarily as a
stabilizer in chlorinated solvents, mainly for 1,1,1-
trichloroethane (TCA), and is now used for a wide
variety of industrial purposes. It stabilizes
solvents by behaving as a Lewis Base and
inhibiting reactions of the solvent with acids and
metal salts that may degrade the properties of the
solvent. It reacts or complexes with the active
metal site, preventing degradation of the solvent.
Dioxane has been added to many grades of TCA at
2 to 3 percent by volume, and in some instances,
up to 8 percent (Mohr 2001).
Dioxane is a probable carcinogen and is found as a
contaminant in water at sites throughout the
United States (U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services [USDHHS] 2002). The physical
properties and behavior of dioxane, including its
high mobility and persistence in the environment,
make characterization and treatment of this
chemical challenging. Its potential risks as a
contaminant in groundwater have not been fully
identified: the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and most states have not
promulgated cleanup levels for dioxane.
EPA and the International Agency for Research on
Cancer (IARC) classify dioxane as a Group B2
(probable human) carcinogen. It has a
carcinogenic oral slope factor of 1.1E-2
milligrams/kilogram/day (mg/kg/day) and its
toxicity is currently being reassessed under the
EPA Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS)
(EPA IRIS 2005; IARC 1999).
In 2001, the Santa Clara Valley Water District of
California prepared a white paper on solvent
stabilizers that provided background information
on dioxane (Mohr 2001). The intent of this report
is to provide an update to that information, present
an overview of issues associated with
characterization and remediation of dioxane, and
discuss technology applications for treating water
contaminated with this chemical. More
information on cleanup of dioxane and links to
additional resources can be found on the EPA
Hazardous Waste Clean-Up Information (CLU-
IN) Web site at http://clu-in.org/contaminantfocus/
default.focus/sec/1.4-Dioxane/cat/Overview/.
1,4-Dioxane Toxicology
There is sufficient evidence for the
carcinogenicity of 1,4-dioxane in experimental
animals. However, there is inadequate
evidence in humans for the carcinogenicity of
L4-dioxane. Therefore, EPA and IARC have
classified 1,4-dioxane as a Group B2 (probable
human) carcinogen (EPA IRIS 2005; IARC
1999).
• According to EPA's IRIS, the carcinogenic risk
from oral exposure to dioxane is 1,1E-2
mg/kg/day.
• The Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) permissible exposure
i i limit (PEL)1 for 1.4-dioxane is 360 milligrams
|L;per cubic meter (mg/m3) (OSHA 1998). MM
Further information on the toxicology of 1,4-
dioxane can be found on the Web site for the
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
(ATSDR)
(liHp:/Avvvw.atsdr.cdc.gov/loxprofiles/lpl87.htn: t).
1 PEL is the concentration of a substance to which most
workers can be exposed without adverse effects averaged
over a normal 8-hour workday or a 40-hour workweek.
1-1
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1.1 Overview of Dioxane Production and
Environmental Occurrence
Exhibit 1 lists some of the common process and
product uses for dioxane. Dioxane may be present
at sites with TCA contamination because it was
primarily used as a stabilizer for TCA (Mohr
2001). TCA frequently occurs in soil and
groundwater at Superfund and other hazardous
waste sites in the United States. In addition, the
relatively high boiling point (101.1°C) of dioxane
can increase its concentration in solvents during
the solvent vapor degreasing process. In one
study, concentrations of dioxane in spent TCA
were measured as being nearly 70 percent greater
than the dioxane concentration in new TCA (2.9
percent versus 1.7 percent by weight) (Joshi and
others, 1989).
Exhibit 1: Process and Product Uses of
Dioxane
Exhibit 1: Process and Product Uses of
Dioxane (continued)
Process
Uses
• Stabilizer in chlorinated solvents
used for degreasing, electronics
manufacturing, and metal finishing
• Solvent for specific applications in
biological procedures (histology)
• Solvent used in impregnating
cellulose acetate membranes used as
filters
• Wetting and dispersing agent in
textile process
• Solvent used in microscopy
• Reaction medium solvent in organic
chemical manufacturing
• By-product formed during
esterification of polyester
Product
Uses
• Solvent in paints, lacquer, and
varnish remover
• Solvent in stain and printing
compositions
• Solvent in liquid scintillation
counters
• Surface treating agent for artificial
leather
• Impurity in antifreeze, including
aircraft de-icing fluid formulations
• Impurity in some consumer products
(such as deodorants, shampoos, and
cosmetics) that incorporate
ethoxylated fatty alcohol sulfates
• "Inert" ingredient in pesticides and
ftimigants
• Purifying agent in Pharmaceuticals
• Solvent in resins, oils, rubber
chemicals, sealants, adhesives,
waxes, and cements
Sources: Mohr 2001 and USDHHS 2002
Information about the occurrence of dioxane in the
environment is limited. In 2002, based on EPA's
Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) data, an estimated
1.15 million pounds of dioxane were released to
the environment from facilities that produced,
processed, or used the chemical in the United
States (EPA 2003). As shown in Exhibit 2, the
mass of dioxane released to the environment was
more than four times the mass of TCA released,
based on data from the 2002 TRI. Use of TCA
was greatly reduced after the 1990 Montreal
Protocol, which restricted emissions of ozone-
degrading compounds. Currently, TCA is not
widely used (Mohr 2005). TRI data serve as a
general indicator of the amount of a particular
chemical released to the environment, but should
not be considered to be a comprehensive measure
of the quantity released. Not all facilities that
produce, process, or use a chemical report the
quantity of its release because of the specific
reporting requirements for TRI data collection.
1-2
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Exhibit 2: 2002 Toxics Release Inventory Data for Dioxane and 1,1,1-Trichloroethane
(all amounts are in pounds)
Chemical
Dioxane
1.1.1-TCA
Surface Water
Discharges3
75,119
99
Releases to
Air"
105,484
234.013
Releases to
Landc
1,902
38.399
Off-site
Releases'1
964,136
1.182
Total Releases
1,146,641
273,693
Source: EPA 2003
Notes:
" Include discharges to streams, rivers, lakes, oceans, and other bodies of water. Include releases from confined sources or open
trenches. Releases caused by runoff are also reportable to TRI under this category.
b Include fugitive and point-source emissions. Fugitive emissions include equipment leaks, evaporative losses from surface
impoundments and spills, and releases from building ventilation systems. Point-source air emissions occur through confined air
streams such as stack, vents, ducts, or pipes.
0 Refer to the incorporation of waste into the soil where the waste degrades in the soil.
d Sum of off-site disposal to Class I underground injection wells. Resource Conservation and Recovery Act Subtitle C landfills,
and other landfills.
1.2 Properties and Behavior of Dioxane in
the Environment
The compound dioxane is a cyclic ether with a
chemical formula of C4H8O2 and a molecular
weight of 88.1. Its two oxygen atoms, each with
free electrons, make it hydrophilic and miscible
in water. In addition, it has virtually no dipole
moment because of its symmetrical structure, as
shown in Exhibit 3. hi its pure form, dioxane is
a colorless, flammable liquid with a faint odor.
It is a peroxidizable compound, capable of
reacting with atmospheric oxygen to form
potentially explosive peroxides (ATSDR 2004).
Exhibit 4 summarizes selected properties of
dioxane and TCA that are relevant to site
characterization and remediation. Because of its
properties, dioxane has been shown to migrate
rapidly in the environment. It can evaporate
from dry soil, but laboratory column studies
have shown that dioxane can also rapidly diffuse
through even low-permeability soils such as silts
and clays, driven by partitioning into the soil
moisture as a result of its low octanol-water
partition coefficient (Kow) (Mohr 2001; Walsom
and Tunnicliffe 2002).
Dioxane can migrate rapidly in groundwater and
will dissolve almost completely because it is
fully miscible. Once dissolved, the chemical's
transport in groundwater is only weakly retarded
by sorption to soil particles or suspended
sediments because of its low Kow (Zenker and
others 2003). hi addition, its low Henry's Law
constant prevents it from volatilizing from the
dissolved to the vapor phase. Although it is
relatively unaffected by sorptive mechanisms in
an aquifer, dioxane can diffuse into static pore
water (the pore fraction that does not participate
in fluid migration), creating the appearance of
retardation. Depending on the relative volume
of static to migrator}' pore water, the resulting
mass of dioxane that can be stored in the static
pore water can be significant (Horst 2005). As a
result, a plume of dioxane can persist after the
source has been removed or controlled.
Because of its physical and chemical properties,
dioxane plumes have been documented to
measure twice the length of the associated
solvent plumes and to affect an area up to six
times greater (Walsom and Tunnicliffe 2002).
Therefore, defining, capturing, and remediating
a plume of dioxane in groundwater are
considerably more challenging than the same
activities for the associated plume of chlorinated
solvent (Walsom and Tunnicliffe 2002).
1-3
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Exhibit 3: Molecular Structure of Dioxane
Exhibit 4: Properties of Dioxane and 1,1,1-
Trichloroethane
2-Dimcnsional Structure
o
I^cXX™,
H2cXs.X^CH2
O
3-Dimensional Structure
Source: USDHHS 2003
1.3 Characterization of Dioxane
As a result of the limitations in the analytical
methods used for dioxane, it has been difficult to
evaluate the occurrence of the chemical in the
environment. Conventional analytical methods
used by commercial laboratories produced
sensitivity levels for the chemical that were
about 100 times greater than those of other
volatile organic compounds (VOC) because of
dioxane?s low Henry's Law constant and vapor
pressure (Mohr 2001). Routine analysis of
VOCs uses a purge-and-trap device to separate
the analytes from the matrix and gas
chromatography (GC) to identify the analytes.
Once they have been identified, one of the
following can be used to quantitate the analytes:
flame ionization detector (SW-846 Method
8015) or mass spectrometer (MS) (SW-846
Method 8260, and water methods 624 and
1624).
Property
Molecular Weight
Melting Point (°C at
760 mm Hg)
Boiling Point (°C at
760 mm Hg)
Flash Point ("Cat 760
mmHg)
Density (g/mL at 20°C)
Water Solubility (mg/L
at 20°C)
Vapor Density (air = 1)
Octanol-Water
Partition Coefficient
(Kow)
Vapor Pressure (mm
Hg at 20°C)
Henry's Law Constant
(atm nrVmole)
Dioxane
88.1
11.8
101.1
5 to 18
1.0329
Miscible
3.03
0.27
30
4.88 x 1Q-6
1,1,1-TCA
133.4
-30.4
74.1
none
L.3
950
4.54
2.49
100
0.0172
Source: CHEMFATE, 2003
Notes: atm = atmosphere; L = liter; mL = milliliter;
mm Hg = millimeters of mercury; g = grams; mg =
milligrams
For 1.4-dioxane, better sample preparative
procedures must be used to achieve increased
sensitivity. Purging at elevated temperatures
allows more dioxane to be removed from water
(as described in SW-846 Method 5030C). Use
of other high temperature sample preparation
techniques, such as equilibrium headspace
analysis (SW 846 Method 5021), vacuum
distillation (SW 846 Method 8261 A) (EPA
2000), and azeotropic distillation (SW 846
Method 5031) also improve the recovery of
dioxane. One common variant in analyzing
dioxane involves improving the sensitivity of the
MS detector by using selected-ion monitoring
(SIM) (Lancaster 2003).
ATSDR provides a general review of the
available analytical methods for dioxane in all
media in "Toxicological Profile for 1,4-Dioxane.
Draft for Public Comment" (ATSDR 2004).
1-4
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1.4 Cleanup Goals and Standards
Currently, there is no federal drinking water
standard for dioxane. However, several EPA
regions and states have developed guidance for
characterizing and remediating dioxane in soil
and water. In September 2004, Colorado
became the first state to establish an enforceable
standard for dioxane in groundwater and surface
water. This standard is being phased in and
requires facilities to have met a 6.1 (.ig/L limit by
March 2005 and a 3.2 (ig/L limit by March
2010. Three EPA regions and several other
states also have set screening levels for dioxane
based on carcinogenic risk; however, these goals
are not currently enforceable. Drinking water
action levels and health advisories are often used
by state regulators to establish appropriate
cleanup goals, and dioxane is listed in regulatory
cleanup orders in many states as a result.
Although a legal or regulatory enforcement level
is absent in all states except Colorado, dioxane
can be subject to regulation through cleanup
requirements (Mohr 2001, 2005).
Exhibit 5 provides examples of EPA and state
guidance for dioxane in soil and water. The
guidance was identified during a review of
readily available information on the Internet and
is current as of September 2006. Information
was available for three EPA regions and 14
states. Various types of goals are presented,
including risk-based standards, preliminary
remediation goals (PRG), and medium-specific
concentrations. A risk-based goal of 6.1 (.ig/L
has been established for dioxane in tap water in
EPA Regions 3, 6, and 9; however this level
does not constitute a regulatory standard.
Exhibit 5 is not intended as a comprehensive
compilation of federal and state cleanup levels
for dioxane. Appendix A lists the Internet
sources used to compile this exhibit.
GRAC's Mnth Symposium in its Series on
Groundwater Contaminants — 1,4-Dioxane and
Other Solvent Stabilizer Compounds in the
Environment
In December 2003. die Groundwater Resources
Association of California (GRAC) held a
symposium in San Jose. California, on 1,4-
dioxane and other solvent stabilizer compounds
in die environment. The symposium addressed
the following issues:
• Nature and extent of 1.4-dioxane occurrence
in the environment
• Survey of 1,4-dioxane occurrence at solvent
release sites in die San Francisco Bay area
• Case studies of the Pall-Gelman Sciences site
and the Stanford Linear Accelerator site
• Updated evahiat ion of the care inogenic
potential of 1,4-dioxane
• Biological treatment options, in situ reactive
zone strategies, and in-well air stripping for
1,4-dioxane removal iii||||||||||
• Ozone-peroxide advanced oxidation
treatment of 1,4-dioxane in water
• Legal aspects of emerging contaminants
A synopsis of some of the presentations at the
symposium is available at the: following Web site:
. i m H i m • .-. •• H
1-5
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Exhibit 5: Summary of Selected U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and State Guidance for Dioxane in Soil and Water
(as of September 2006)
EPA Region
or State
Region 3
Region 6
Region 9
Arizona
California
Colorado
Delaware
Florida
Iowa
Maine
Michigan
Type of Guidance
Risk-Based Concentrations
Human Health Medium-Specific Screening Levels
Preliminary Remediation Goals
Soil Remediation Levels
Health-Based Advisory Levels
Water Quality Standard
Uniform Risk-Based Remediation Standards
(Guidance)
Soil Cleanup Target Levels
Standard for Soil
Maximum Exposure Guideline
Generic Cleanup Criteria and Screening Levels
Matrix
Tap Water
Soil
Tap Water
Soil
Tap Water
Soil
Soil
Drinking Water
Soil
Groundwater and
Surface Water
Groundwater
Soil
Soil
Groundwater
Soil
Drinking Water
Drinking Water
Soil
Concentration
6.1 ug/L
260 mg/kg (Industrial)
58 mg/kg (Residential)
0.0013 to 0.0026 mg/kg (Groundwater Protection)
6.1 ug/L
170 to 520 mg/kg (Industrial)
44 mg/kg (Residential)
6.1 ug/L
160 mg/kg (Industrial)
44 mg/kg (Residential)
1,700 nig/kg (Nonresidential)
400 mg/kg (Residential)
3 ug/L
0.0018 mg/kg (Residential and Industrial)
6.1 ug/L by March 2005; 3.2 ug/L by March 2010
6 ug/L
0.6 mg/kg (Critical Water Resource Area)
58 to 520 mg/kg (Non-critical Water Resource Area)
38 mg/kg (Direct Exposure - Commercial/Industrial)
23 mg/kg (Direct Exposure - Residential)
0.01 mg/kg (Leachability - Groundwater)
0.5 mg/kg (Leachabilirv - Surface Water)
3.2 ug/L
280 mg/kg (Statewide Standard)
32 ug/L
350 ug/L (Industrial)
85 ug/L (Residential)
7 mg/kg (Drinking Water Protection - Industrial)
56 mg/kg (Groundwater - Surface Water Interface - Industrial)
2,400 to 3,400 mg/kg (Direct Contact - Industrial)
34,000 mg/kg (Groundwater Contact Protection - Industrial)
1-6
-------
Exhibit 5: Summary of Selected U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and State Guidance for Dioxane in Soil and Water
(as of September 2006) (continued)
EPA Region
or State
Missouri
Pennsylvania
South Carolina
Texas
West Virginia
Wyoming
Type of Guidance
Target Concentrations
Medium-Specific Concentrations for Organic
Regulated Substances in Groundwater
Drinking Water Regulation and Health Advisory-
Protected Concentration Levels
Risk-Based Concentrations
Soil Cleanup Level
Matrix
Groundwater
Soil
Groundwater
Soil
Drinking Water
Groundwater
Soil
Soil
Groundwater
Soil
Soil
Concentration
56 mg/kg (Groundwater - Surface Water Interface - Residential)
530 mg/kg (Direct Contact - Residential)
34,000 mg/kg (Groundwater Contact - Residential)
1.7 mg/kg (Drinking Water Protection - Residential)
97,000 mg/kg (Soil Saturation Concentration)
3 ug/L
150 to 590 mg/kg (Direct Exposure)
0.01 mg/kg (Leaching to Groundwater)
5.6 ug/L (Used Aquifers - Residential)
24 (ig/L (Used Aquifers - Nonresidential)
56 ug/L (Nonuse Aquifers - Residential)
240 ug/L (Nonuse Aquifers - Nonresidential)
210 to 240 mg/kg (Direct Contact - Nonresidential.)
0.3 1 to 240 mg/kg (Groundwater Protection - Nonresidential)
41 mg/kg (Direct Contact - Residential)
0.0073 to 56 mg/kg (Groundwater Protection -Residential)
70 ug/L (Monthly average)
18.6 (ig/L (Commercial/Industrial)
8.3 ug/L (Residential)
2,600 mg/kg (Total Combined Pathways - Industrial)
0.36 mg/kg (Groundwater Protection - Industrial)
552 mg/kg (Total Combined Pathways - Residential)
0.083 mg/kg (Groundwater Protection - Residential)
290 to 29,000 mg/kg (Industrial)
1,000 to 100,000 mg/kg (Residential)
6.1 ug/L
5,200 mg/kg (Industrial)
58 mg/kg (Residential)
44 mg/kg (Residential)
Source: Internet sources reviewed in September 2006. (Appendix A lists the Internet sources used to compile tin's summary.)
Notes:
mg/kg = milligrams per kilogram
ug/L= micrograms per liter
1-7
-------
2.0 TREATMENT OF MEDIA
CONTAINING DIOXANE
The physical and chemical properties of dioxane
discussed in Section 1.0 create challenges for
removing this compound from water. Dioxane is
well suited to removal by groundwater extraction
because of its high solubility and low degree of
partitioning to organic matter in soil. However,
the relatively low Henry's Law constant of
dioxane makes technologies such as air stripping
generally ineffective in treating the chemical in
water. Its low adsorptive capacity also limits the
effectiveness of treatment by granular activated
carbon (GAC), although one full-scale GAC
application was identified. As discussed in
Section 1.0, bench-scale studies indicate that
biodegradation of dioxane is possible, but
information on field applications of this
technology is limited (Zenker and others 2003).
Technologies that are effective for treating
chlorinated solvents are often ineffective for
treating dioxane because the properties of dioxane
differ from those of chlorinated solvents. To date,
the number and types of technologies available to
treat dioxane are limited; however, research is
under way to test and evaluate additional treatment
technologies for this contaminant. This report
provides information about three technologies that
have been used to treat dioxane at the pilot and full
scale levels:
• Advanced oxidation (ex situ)
• Adsorption (GAC) (ex situ)
• Bioremediation
As discussed previously, dioxane in soil tends to
readily partition to groundwater and does not sorb
to soil particles. Therefore, groundwater is the
primary medium of concern for this contaminant.
The following sections present information about
technologies applicable for treating dioxane and
include site-specific examples where available.
Section 2.1 addresses full- and pilot-scale
treatment applications for dioxane in water;
Section 2.2 briefly discusses potential technologies
for treating dioxane in soil; and Section 2.3
presents information on research in bioremediation
and phytoremediation.
2.1 Treatment Technologies for Dioxane in
Water
This section discusses applications of advanced
oxidation (ex situ), GAC adsorption (ex situ), and
bioremediation to treat dioxane in water.
2.1.1 Advanced Oxidation (Ex Situ)
Advanced oxidation processes (AOP) are
commercially available for aboveground treatment
of dioxane in water. The technology can be used
independently or as a pre- or post-treatment step in
a remediation process. AOPs use hydroxyl
radicals, which are powerful oxidizers, to
sequentially oxidize organic contaminants to
carbon dioxide, water, and residual chloride (Mohr
2001; Berman and others 1998; Walsom and
Tunnicliffe 2002). Two common AOPs include
hydrogen peroxide with ultraviolet (UV) light, and
hydrogen peroxide with ozone. UV light causes
the release of hydroxyl radicals from hydrogen
peroxide added to contaminated water. Hydroxyl
radicals are also generated when ozone is mixed
with hydrogen peroxide, even in the absence of
UV light, as shown in the equation below.
Other AOPs include hydrogen peroxide with
ferrous iron (Fentoir s reagent) and ozone with UV
light. However, no sites w
-------
hydrogen peroxide and UV light. The system was
originally installed to treat vinyl chloride
contamination and was shut down after
concentrations of vinyl chloride dropped below the
maximum contaminant level. The system was
then tested to evaluate whether it was capable of
treating dioxane and it proved effective. The
system was restarted in October 2003 and treated
approximately 2.7 million gallons of groundw-ater
each month. The system reduced the
concentrations of dioxane to below the EPA
Region 9 tap water PRG of 6.1 (.ig/L and is no
longer in operation (Zabaneh 2004; Gronstal
2006).
Exhibit 6: Process Flow Diagram of a Typical Ozone/Hydrogen Peroxide Groundwater Treatment
System
Hydrogen
Pa-oxide
Reactor Off-Gas
(to be treated by ozone
d ec omp o siti on therm al
destruction, or
carbon adsorption)
Contaminated
Groundwater
(Pretreated if
necessary)
Air or
Oxygen
Treated
Effluent
Source: Federal Remediation Technologies Roundtable (FRTR) 2006
An AOP consisting of hydrogen peroxide and UV
light is being used to treat dioxane in groundwater
at the Gloucester Landfill site in Ontario. Canada.
The site served as a municipal waste dump from
approximately 1957 to 1980 and as a disposal area
for federal laboratory, university, and hospital
wastes from 1969 to 1980. Chemicals from the
wastes seeped into the groundwater, contaminating
a shallow, unconfined aquifer and a deep, confined
aquifer. A 29-well pump-and-treat system has
been operated at the site since 1992 to contain the
contaminant plume and remove the contaminant
mass from the aquifers. The system pumps and
treats approximately 132 gallons per minute (gpm)
from the deep aquifer and 61 gpm from the
shallow aquifer. The extracted groundwater is
treated at the site using the following process:
adding acid to the influent groundwater to reduce
the pH to an optimal level for treatment, passing
the groundwater through a series of UV lamps in
the presence of hydrogen peroxide to destroy
target contaminants, and adding sodium hydroxide
to raise the pH again (the exact pH value was not
provided). After sodium hydroxide has been
added, the treated groundwater is reinjected at one
or more of five locations upgradient of the site.
2-2
-------
Pall-Gelman Sciences Site - UV Light and
Hydrogen Peroxide Treatment System Details
A treatment system using UV light and hydrogen
peroxide was applied at the Pall-Gelman Sciences
site. Eighteen purge wells, including a 4,479-foot
long horizontal well, were used to extract and divert
groundwater. Purged water was mixed with
sulfuric acid (a 93 percent solution by volume) in a
lined pretreatment pond known as the "Red Pond"
to lower the pH to 3.8. Earlier studies showed a pH
of 3.8 to be optimal for hydrogen peroxide chemical
reactions in conjunction with UV light, 1111111111
In the first step of treatment, a 50 percent Irydrogen
peroxide solution was injected into the treatment
line and mixed with groundwater by a static mixer.
Water then passed through a multiple-chamber UV
system consisting of 22 lamps, where it was HI
exposed to UV radiation for approximately 5
seconds. After UVand hydrogen peroxide
treatment, the pH of the treated water was raised to
approximately 6.9 by adding sodium hydroxide; (40
percent by volume) to meet the surface water
discharge: requirement of 6.5 to 9.0. Sodium
bisulfatealso was added to remove excess hydrogen
peroxide before; the water was discharged to an on-
site holding pond known as the; "Green Pond." The
water was monitored daily to ensure compliance;
with state requirements before it was released into
an unnamed tributary of Honey Creek, which flows
into the Huron River.
Large volumes of reactive cliemicals were required
for treating groundwater using the UV and;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
hydrogen peroxide treatment system. The electrical
demand also was high, averaging $850 per day.
The overall treatinent cost for the system was HI
approximately $3.50 per 1.000 gallons. For these
reasons, the site owner converted the UV and
hydrogen peroxide system to an ozone and
hydrogen peroxide-based technology in 2005 to
reduce hydrogen peroxide consumption by 50
percent and eliminate the need for sulfuric acid and
sodium hydroxide. Treatment costs using this new
system w:ere anticipated to be approximately
$1.50/1.000 gallons (Erode and others 2005). ||||
Performance data for the system were not
available (Ludwig 1997).
An AOP consisting of UV-hydrogen peroxide
oxidation was used to treat landfill leachate and
contaminated groundwater at the Charles George
Landfill, a Superfund site in Massachusetts. The
contaminated liquid was extracted downgradient
of the capped landfill and pumped to a 3.6-
million-gallon storage lagoon, where it was
treated. Initial concentrations of dioxane in the
liquid were not provided; however, the system was
able to reduce the concentration to 7 ug/L to meet
the standard for surface water discharge specified
in the record of decision (ROD) (U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers [USAGE] 2004).
Dioxane was unintentionally released into the
subsurface in the 1960s at the Pall-Gehnan
Sciences site in Michigan. The source of the
contamination was a manufacturer of micro-
porous filters. The manufacturer used dioxane as
a solvent for cellulose acetate, which was a
component of specific membrane filters made at
the site. The chemical was released into the
subsurface primarily through a state-permitted,
unlined treatment pond that was used to treat and
dispose process wastes. Dioxane was eliminated
from the manufacturing process in the mid-1980s
(GRAC 2003). Groundwater samples collected at
that time contained concentrations of dioxane as
high as 221,000 ug/L.
Dioxane migrated into a complex sequence of
glacial outwash deposits that form highly
transmissive aquifers at the site. Once it reached
these aquifer systems, the dioxane migrated more
than 2 miles from the source areas in multiple
plumes. This release constituted one of the
nation's largest releases of dioxane to groundwater
(Tetra Tech EM Inc. [Tetra Tech] 2003).
Groundwater at the Pall-Gehnan Sciences site was
routinely monitored at 50 to 100 locations.
Treatment system influent concentrations ranged
from 3,000 to 4,000 ug/L and effluent
concentrations ranged from nondetect to 10 ug/L.
The method detection limit was 1.0 ug/L.
Although treatment has only slightly reduced the
areal extent of the plumes, 2 billion gallons of
groundwater have been purged, treated, and
discharged since 1997, and more than 60,000
pounds of dioxane have been removed from the
contaminated aquifers. The concentration of
dioxane within the plumes has also decreased.
(GRAC 2003; Erode and others 2005).
21
-3
-------
Hydrogen Peroxide with Ozone
Eight projects that involved the treatment of
dioxane in groundwater at five sites using a
hydrogen peroxide-and-ozone-based system
(HiPOx) were identified. A full-scale HiPOx
system was built and installed as a pre-treatment
step to remove dioxane and reduce chlorinated
solvent concentrations in the contaminated
groundwater at a confidential site in South El
Monte, California. Initially, the system was
operated using one well at 500 gpm and used three
ozone injectors with 8-inch, static mixers. Later, a
second well was added and the system flow rate
was increased to 1,000 gpm. The system lowered
the dioxane concentration from 4.6 (ig/L in the
influent to less than 1 (.ig/L in the effluent. The
analytical method that was used was not specified
(Bowman and others 2003; GRAC 2003).
Dioxane was found in extraction wells that fed an
air stripper that was already in operation to remove
chlorinated solvents from groundwater at a
confidential site in City of Industry, California.
Pilot tests showed that the HiPOx system could
reduce the concentration of dioxane from 610
(ig/L in the influent to 9.5 (.ig/L in the effluent
(Bowman and others 2003). Pilot data were used
to configure a commercial-scale unit that reduces
the influent concentration of dioxane of 320 (ig/L
to an effluent concentration below the detection
limit of 1 (.ig/L. The analytical method that was
used was not specified. The commercial unit was
installed in February 2002 and operates at a flow
rate of 45 gpm (Bowman and others 2003; GRAC
2003; Applied Process Technology, Inc. [APT],
2005a).
The concentration of dioxane in the effluent from
an air stripping and carbon adsorption treatment
system was 15 (ig/L, while the statutory discharge
limit was 5 (ig/L at the Middlefield-Ellis-Whisman
Superfund Site in Mountain View, California. The
air stripper and GAC system were replaced with a
50-gpm HiPOx unit that began operation in
December 2003. The concentration of dioxane in
the system effluent has been consistently reduced
to below the detection limit of 1 (.ig/L. As of
October 2006, the effluent concentration remains
non-detect. The analytical method used was EPA
Method 8270-SIM (Boarer and Milne, 2004).
Carbon adsorption and air stripping systems were
in place to treat tetrachloroethene and TCA at a
confidential industrial site in the Pacific
Northwest. In 2002, dioxane was discovered at
levels of up to 200 (ig/L. A 20-gpm HiPOx unit
was installed in April 2003 as a post-treatment to
the carbon system and air stripper. The
concentration of dioxane in the effluent has been
reduced to below 6 (.ig/L (APT 2005b).
A treatment train that consisted of GAC and an
undisclosed treatment system removed chlorinated
solvents from groundwater at an industrial site in
Orange County, California. In addition, a
coagulation step was used to meet discharge
requirements for suspended solids at the site. In
2003, dioxane was detected at concentrations of
approximately 170 (.ig/L. The National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit at
this site called for reduction of dioxane to below 3
Hg/L. A 10-gpm mobile HiPOx field
demonstration unit was used in tests on site. The
demonstration showed that the dioxane could be
reduced to meet the 3 (.ig/L pennit requirement
and a stationary 10-gpm HiPOx unit was installed
in March 2004. The HiPOx unit is currently in
operation and is reducing the concentration of
dioxane to below 3 (ig/L, and is also reducing 1,1-
dichloroethylene (DCE) at 8 (.ig/L and
trichloroethene (TCE) at 3 (.ig/L each to below 1
(.ig/L. The GAC system was retained at the
effluent of the HiPOx system to remove other
VOCs, such as TCA. The coagulation step was
also retained (APT 2005c). The performance data
for the Middlefield-Ellis-Whisman Superfund site
and the industrial site in Orange County,
California, do not appear to indicate a relationship
between the flow rate of the HiPOx system and the
reduction in contaminant concentrations achieved.
Further research is required to better understand
the effect of the system flow rate on treatment
efficiency.
Limitations of AOPs
Although AOPs are capable of reducing the
concentration of dioxane, potential limitations
need to be considered before the technology can
be implemented. Some of these limitations are
listed below:
2-4
-------
• If the dioxane-contaminated water contains
bromide, ozone will oxidize it to bromate.
IARC has classified bromate as a Group B2
(probable human) carcinogen. Therefore, the
potential to form bromate must be considered
and the production of bromate should be
reduced as much as possible. These
reductions may be achieved by adding
ammonia or by decreasing the pH (Horst
2005).
• The potential fonnation of AOP
decomposition products such as aldehydes and
organic acids (Burgess 2005).
• If UV light is used as part of the oxidation
process, the aqueous stream being treated must
provide for good transmission of the light;
high turbidity interferes with the oxidation
reaction and should be reduced before
treatment (FRTR 2006).
• Advanced oxidation reactions rely on contact
between the oxidant and contaminant, which
can limit the ability of the oxidation system to
handle contaminant concentrations
significantly above 1 milligram per liter
(mg/L) without multiple units in series (Horst
2005)
• Free radical scavengers (for example,
hydroxyl scavengers such as carbonate and
bicarbonate) can inhibit contaminant
destruction efficiency (Horst 2005: FRTR
2005).
2.1.2 Adsorption (GAC) (Ex Situ)
Adsorption involves concentrating contaminants
on the surface of a sorbent such as GAC, thereby
reducing the concentration of those contaminants
in the liquid being treated. GAC was used to treat
solvents in groundwater at the Stanford Linear
Accelerator Center (SLAC) site in Menlo Park.
California, before dioxane was discovered. It was
later found that dioxane was present in the
groundwater at concentrations ranging from a few
(ig/L to 1,000s of (.ig/L. The concentration of
dioxane was the highest at the location of a former
underground storage tank (reported as high as
7.300 (ig/L). Adsorption using GAC was found to
remove the dioxane despite expectations based on
the properties of the contaminant. Analytical
results of influent and effluent water samples
collected from the treatment system showed that
although the influent water has historically
contained dioxane at concentrations as high as
1,500 (.ig/L, the compound was not present in the
effluent water samples analyzed. The unexpected
result could be attributed to low influent
concentrations to the treatment system, very low
flow rates (0.5 gpm), or possible biodegradation of
dioxane on carbon surfaces in the presence of
tetrahydrofuran, another constituent of the influent
to the GAC (GRAC 2003).
2.1.3 Bioremediation
Ex situ bioremediation of groundwater involves
putting contaminants in the extracted groundwater
in contact with microorganisms in attached or
suspended growth biological reactors. Ex situ
bioremediation was selected to treat dioxane in
groundwater at the Lowry Landfill Superfund site
near Denver, Colorado. Between 1960 and 1980,
the site was used for co-disposal of industrial and
municipal solid wastes. Industrial waste liquids
mat contained spent solvents, which included
dioxane, were placed in unlined pits and
subsequently contaminated shallow groundwater.
The ROD issued for the site required collection
and treatment of landfill leachate and shallow
groundwater emanating from the landfill mass.
Numerous treatability studies were conducted to
evaluate potential treatment options for dioxane in
the collected groundwater. A fixed-film,
biological process was pilot tested in a continuous-
flow configuration using Kaldnes media at
temperatures of 15°C and 25°C. Kaldnes is a
buoyant plastic media engineered in a wheel
shape, allowing a small amount of water flow to
circulate the media throughout the vessel. The
pilot system successfully treated between 0.4 and
0.7 gpm of extracted groundwater that contained
8,000 to 12,000 (.ig/L of dioxane; the effluent
concentrations were less than 200 (.ig/L. Similar
results were obtained at both temperatures.
Extensive testing indicated that dioxane was
degraded as a co-metabolite in the presence of
tetrahydrofuran (Zenker and others 2000). A full-
scale, fixed-film, moving-bed, biological treatment
system was deployed at the site in December 2003
(GRAC 2003). Performance data for the full-scale
system were not available in the references used
for this report.
2-5
-------
Exhibit 7 at the end of Section 2.0 summarizes 15
projects forme treatment of dioxane in
groundwater. The timeframe for the projects
(where this information was provided) ranges from
July 1998 to the present.
2.2 Treatment of Dioxane in Soil
Dioxane typically migrates through soil rapidly
and enters groundwater because it has a relatively
high solubility and boiling point and a low log Kow
and Henry's Law constant. When it is present in
soil, however, its physical properties indicate that
it is theoretically volatile enough to be removed in
situ using soil vapor extraction or ex situ with
thermal desorption, even though its vapor pressure
is lower than many VOCs. A factor to consider if
a soil vapor extraction system is used is that
dioxane will likely partition to the soil pore water
in the vadose zone. The system should therefore
be able to eliminate soil moisture to be effective
(Horst 2005). Dioxane should also theoretically
be amenable to removal from soil in situ or ex situ
using cosolvent extraction with water as a solvent
because of its hydrophilic characteristic. No full-
er pilot-scale projects that involved treatment of
dioxane in soil were identified from the sources
reviewed for this report.
2.3 Ongoing Research on Dioxane Treatment
Research is being conducted on various
technologies to assess whether they are capable of
treating dioxane. These technologies include
bioremediation using various strains of bacteria
and phytoremediation.
The primary evidence for biodegradation of
dioxane is from aerobic systems. Biodegradation
pathways can be broken down into two categories:
1. Metabolic degradation (where dioxane serves
as the primary growth substrate); at least four
bacterial species are known to metabolically
degrade dioxane under aerobic conditions:
Amycolata sp. Strain CB1190, Mycobacterium
vaccae, and two strains of Rhodococcus sp.
2. Cometabolic degradation (where dioxane is
not the primary growth substrate but is
degraded in the presence of other metabolites);
examples include degradation in the presence
of a structural analog, such as tetrahydrofuran
(Horst 2005).
In addition to the pilot-scale bioremediation
project described in Section 2.1.3, a bench-scale
study was conducted to evaluate the ability of a
Amycolata sp. Strain CB1190, to degrade dioxane
in industrial sludge obtained from a site in
Darlington, South Carolina. CB1190 was able to
degrade dioxane at a rate of 0.33 mg of
dioxane/minute/mg of protein and mineralize 59.5
percent of the dioxane to carbon dioxide. This rate
of degradation indicates that CB1190 has the
potential to contribute to a practical and
economical process for bioremediation of dioxane-
contaminated groundwater and waste streams
(Parales and others 1994).
In another bench-scale bioremediation study,
bacterial inocula were isolated from dioxane-
contaminated groundwater obtained from a
Massachusetts Brownfields site. The bacteria
were enriched using standard microbiological
subculturing techniques, and the enrichment serum
bottles were incubated under butane for a 4-week
period. A microcosm study of the bottles
indicated that butane was consumed and that
dioxane was degraded from concentrations as high
as 7.7 mg/L to sub-(ig/L concentrations within a
48-hour period as a result of the biostimulation.
Butane biostimulation enhances contaminant
destruction by encouraging the naturally occurring
bacteria that are already acclimated to site
conditions to flourish. This study demonstrates
the potential for bioremediation of dioxane using
butane biostimulation (GRAC 2003).
The ability of bioremediation to address dioxane
contamination is being evaluated in various other
bench-scale studies. Some of these studies are
being funded by the Strategic Environmental
Research and Development Program (SERDP) and
are aimed at developing a mechanistic
understanding of the enzymes, pathways, and
kinetics of dioxane biodegradation; identifying
and isolating new dioxane degrading microbes;
identifying the products of dioxane biodegradation
by studying degradation pathways in pure bacterial
cultures; and confirming that the same
biodegradation pathways occur in active
environmental samples (Steffan 2005; Alvarez-
Cohen 2005).
2-6
-------
Exhibit 7: Summary of Full- and Pilot-Scale Treatment Projects for Dioxane in Groundwater
Site Name, Location
Initial
Contaminant
Concentration
(Hg/L)1
Final
Contaminant
Concentration
(Hg/L)1
Scale
Technology
Period of
Operation
Cleanup Goal
Gifi/L)
Operating
Parameter(s)
Source
Advanced Oxidation Processes (AOP) (Ex Situ)
WP 68, McClellan
AFB, Sacramento,
CA
Gloucester Landfill,
Ontario, Canada
Charles George
Landfill.
Tyngsborough, MA
Pall-Gelman
Sciences, Ann Arbor,
MI
Confidential Site,
South El Monte, CA
64.1
(samples
collected in
September 2004)
NA
NA
3,000 to 4,000
20.2
16.5 (samples
collected in
September 2004)
<6.1 (samples
collected after
September 2004)
NA
7
NDto 10
<2
Full
Full
Full
Full
Pilot
UV-hydrogen
peroxide
UV-hydrogen
peroxide
UV-hydrogen
peroxide
UV-hydrogen
peroxide
HiPOx (ozone +
hydrogen peroxide)
pre '-treatment for
air stripping
October
2003 to date
unknown
1992 to
present
NA
NA
July to
August 1998
6.1 (EPA tap
water PRO)
NA
NA
NA
<3
NA
Addition of acid to
reduce pH; passing
groundwater through
series of UV lamps in
presence of hydrogen
peroxide: addition of
caustic to increase
pH
NA
Addition of acid to
lower pH; injection
with 50 percent
hydrogen peroxide
solution; passing
groundwater through
series of UV lamps;
addition of caustic to
increase pH
9.4 ppm ozone; 14.2
ppin hydrogen
peroxide: 18-reactor
system
Zabaneh 2004
Ludwig 1997
USAGE 2004
GRAC 2003
Bowman and
others 2003:
GRAC 2003
2-7
-------
Exhibit 7: Summary of Full- and Pilot-Scale Treatment Projects for 1,4-Dioxane in Groundwater (continued)
Site Name, Location
Confidential Site,
City of Industry-, C A
Middlefield-Ellis-
Whisman Superfund
Site. Mountain View.
CA
Confidential Site,
Pacific Northwest
Confidential Site,
Orange County, CA
Initial
Contaminant
Concentration
(Hg/L)1
4.6
610
320
15
200
170
Final
Contaminant
Concentration
Gig/L)1
0.85
9.5
<0.95
< 0.94
<6
<3
Scale
Full
Pilot
Full
Full
Full
Pilot
Full
Technology
HiPOx (ozone +
hydrogen peroxide)
pre-treatment for
air stripping
HiPOx (ozone +
hydrogen peroxide)
pre-treatment for
air stripping
HiPOx (ozone +
hydrogen peroxide)
post-treatment for
air stripping
HiPOx (ozone +
hydrogen peroxide)
HiPOx (ozone +
hydrogen peroxide)
post- treatment for
carbon and air
stripping
HiPOx (ozone +
hydrogen peroxide)
HiPOx (ozone +
hydrogen peroxide)
pre-treatment for
GAC
Period of
Operation
August 2000
to
September
2004
August 2000
to January
2001
February
2001 to
present
December
2003 to
present
April 2003
to present
January
2004 '
March 2004
to present
Cleanup Goal
GiB/L)
<3
<3
<3
5 (statutory
discharge limit)
<6
<3
Operating
Parameter(s)
3.1 ppm ozone: 6.9
ppm hydrogen
peroxide; 3 -reactor
system (pre-treatment
step for GAC
treatment)
NA
70 gpm at startup:
eventually reduced to
50 gpm
50 gpm
20 gpm
10 gpm
Source
Bowman and
others 2003:
GRAC 2003; APT
2005a
Boarer and Milne
2004
APT 2005b
APT 2005c
GAC Adsorption
SLAC, Menlo Park,
CA (Former
Underground Storage
Tank Area)
7,300
NA
Full
GAC
NA
NA
NA
GRAC 2003
2-8
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Exhibit 7: Summary of Full- and Pilot-Scale Treatment Projects for 1,4-Dioxane in Groundwater (continued)
Site Name, Location
Initial
Contaminant
Concentration
(Hg/L)1
Final
Contaminant
Concentration
Gig/L)1
Scale
Technology
Period of
Operation
Cleanup Goal
GiB/L)
Operating
Parameter^)
Source
Bio remediation
Lowry Landfill
Superfund Site,
Aurora, CO
8,000 to 12,000
NA
<200
NA
Pilot
Full
Bioremediation
(fixed film
bioreactor using
Kaldnes media)
NA
NA
NA
GRAC 2003
Notes:
1 Based on available data, initial and final contaminant concentrations for projects with treatment trains may be for the entire train or for technologies within the train that were intended to treat
dioxane.
NA = Not available in information reviewed
ND = Nondetect
gpm = Gallons per minute
ppm = Parts per million
2-9
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A study of the relationship between enhancing
biodegradability and oxidizing dioxane using
ozone and hydrogen peroxide showed a linear
correlation. The initial dioxane solutions
exhibited negligible or near-zero biological
oxygen demand (an indicator of biodegradation)
with the biological seed employed. This finding
confirmed that dioxane is not readily
biodegradable and may not be removed effectively
using conventional biological methods. The
concentration of dioxane in the solution decreased
and biological oxygen demand increased with each
treatment of ozone and hydrogen peroxide.
indicating partial oxidation of dioxane and
transformation of this compound into more
biodegradable intermediates (Suh and Mohseni
2004).
Phytoremediation has also been investigated to
assess its suitability for removing dioxane in
groundwater. Phytoremediation as it applies to
dioxane is a relatively new remedial approach, and
many of the associated removal and degradation
pathways are being studied. Phytoremediation
relies on multiple processes to remove
contaminants from groundwater. Examples
include the uptake of contaminated water, after
which dioxane may be metabolized or volatilized
from plant leaves (phytovolatilization), and the
biodegradation of dioxane in the rhizosphere (root
zone).
Papers published on the potential for
phytoremediation of dioxane have evaluated the
usefulness of various plants and trees, such as
hybrid poplars. Aitchison and others 2000 states
that removal of 54 percent of dioxane in
contaminated water was achieved within 9 days in
hydroponic environments by using hybrid poplar
cuttings. Most of the removal (about 36 percent)
was attributed to phyto volatilization. New
research is examining the possibility of
bioaugmenting the phytoremediation process with
the bacterium Amycolata sp. Strain CB 1190 to
enhance in situ biodegradation in the rhizosphere
(Kelley and others 2001). Other studies have
shown that phytoremediation is a viable alternative
for dioxane in groundwater. although the
technology's effectiveness may be limited to
shallow groundwater where contamination is
confined to a limited depth within the root zone of
the trees (up to about 15 feet deep for hybrid
poplars) (EPA 2001). Aboveground hydroponic
treatment systems may also be suitable for
removing dioxane from extracted groundwater for
low-flow groundwater treatment regimens.
Phytoremediation may also serve to provide long-
term stabilization of dioxane-contaminated soil
that would otherwise require excavation and
stockpiling (GRAC 2003).
Photocatalysis is another emerging process used to
treat dioxane. As opposed to hydrogen peroxide
and UV light, where high energy photons are used
to cleave the peroxide molecule and generate
hydroxyl radicals, photocatalysis with titanium
dioxide (TiO2) uses the full spectrum of UV light
to activate the TiO2 catalyst, thereby creating
organic destaiction pathways. Purifies ES Inc.
uses this technology in its Photo-CAT product line
(Powell 2006).
Another company, Accelerated Remediation
Technologies, LLC (ART), uses in-well
technology combining in situ air stripping, air
sparging, soil vapor extraction, enhanced
bioremediation, and dynamic subsurface
groundwater circulation to treat dioxane
contamination. The in-well technology was able
to reduce dioxane concentrations by up to 90
percent within 3 months during a pilot study
conducted in North Carolina by Delta
Environmental, Inc. (Odali and others 2005).
2-10
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APPENDIX A
INTERNET SOURCES FOR SUMMARY OF SELECTED U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY AND STATE GUIDANCE FOR DIOXANE IN SOIL AND WATER
EPA Region
or State
Region 3
Region 6
Region 9
Arizona
California
Colorado
Delaware
Florida
Iowa
Maine
Michigan
Missouri
Pennsylvania
Texas
West
Virginia
Wyoming
Internet Source
EPA Region 3 Risk-Based Concentration Table
http://www.epa.gov/ree31nvmd/nsk/hunian/rbc/rbc0406.pdf
EPA Region 6 Human Health Medium-Specific Screening Levels
http://www.epa.gov/earthlr6/6pd/rcra c/pd-n/screenvalues.pdf
EPA Region 9 PRO
http://www.epa.gov/reuion09/waste/sfund/prg/files/02table.pdf
Arizona Administrative Code, Title 18, Chapter 7
http://www.azsos.sov/public services/title 1 8/18-07. htm
California Health-Based Advisory Levels, Table A
http://www .swrcb.ca.gov/nvacb2/RBSL/SFRWOCB%20RBSLs%20Vol. 1 (December
%202001).Ddf
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Water Quality Control
Commission Regulations
http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/op/regs/waterregs/100241basicstandardsforgroundwater.
pdf
Remediation Standards Guidance Under the Delaware Hazardous Substance Cleanup
Act
http://www.dnrec.state.de.iis/dnrec2000/Di visions/AWM/sirb/DOCS/PDFS/Misc/Rem
Stnd.pdf
University of Florida
http://fdep.ifas.ufl.edu/TTable2.pdf
Standards for Soil, Iowa Land Recycling Program
http://www.iow7adnr. com/1 and/consites/lrp/conLRP.html
Maximum Exposure Guidelines for Drinking Water
http://mainegov-images.infomie.org/dhhs/eohp/wells/megtable.pdf
Rule744Table.pdf, Rule748Table.pdf, and Rule746Table.pdf
http://www.michigaii.gOv/dea/0. 1 607.7- 135-3311 -58095-.00.html
Cleanup Levels for Missouri
http://www.dnr. state .mo. us/alpd/hwp/pub468b.pdf
Effective Statewide Health Standard MSCs
http://www.pacode.com/seciire/data/025/chapter250/s250.708.htnil
Texas State Cleanup Levels, Search Engine
http://w\vw. pela.com/SCLs/TCLSearch. asp
West Virginia Voluntary Remediation and Redevelopment Act
http://www.dep. state.W'V.us/Docs/3200 ReinediationGuidanceVersioii2-l.pdf
Soil Cleanup Level Look-up Table Under the Voluntary Remediation Program
http://deq.state.wv. us/volreiiiedi/downloads/Fact%20Sheet%2012%20Jan05/F%20S%
20 1 2%200 1 -06-05%20clean.odf
A-l
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j
\
UJ
O
Treatment Technologies
For 1,4-Dioxane:
Fundamentals And Field
Applications
Office of Solid Waste and
Emergency Response
EPA-542-R-06-009
December 2006
www.epa.gov/tio
http://clu-in.org
United States
Environmental Protection Agency
(5203P)
Washington D.C. 20460
Official Business
Penalty for Private Use $300
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