Difference between revisions of "Thermal Remediation"

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In situ thermal remediation (ISTR) has gained wide acceptance over the last 20 years. It is now considered an accepted contaminant source reduction technology with a high degree of certainty for achieving remedial objectives. ISTR consists of heating subsurface groundwater and the vadose zone to facilitate volatilization or other contaminant removal mechanisms, followed by contaminant extraction and treatment. The three major ISTR technologies are [[Thermal Remediation - Steam | Steam Enhanced Extraction (SEE)]], [[Thermal Remediation - Electrical Resistance Heating | Electrical Resistance Heating (ERH)]] and [[Thermal Remediation - Desorption | Thermal Conduction Heating (TCH)]]. Technology selection depends on specific site conditions, contaminant properties, and remedial objectives. At many sites, thermal technologies can be combined with less aggressive remediation methods for complete site and plume restoration (see also [[Thermal Remediation - Combined Remedies]]).
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''In situ'' thermal remediation (ISTR) has gained wide acceptance over the last 20 years. It is now considered an accepted contaminant source reduction technology with a high degree of certainty for achieving remedial objectives. ISTR consists of heating subsurface groundwater and the vadose zone to facilitate volatilization or other contaminant removal mechanisms, followed by contaminant extraction and treatment. The three major ISTR technologies are [[Thermal Remediation - Steam | Steam Enhanced Extraction (SEE)]], [[Thermal Remediation - Electrical Resistance Heating | Electrical Resistance Heating (ERH)]] and [[Thermal Remediation - Desorption | Thermal Conduction Heating (TCH)]]. Technology selection depends on specific site conditions, contaminant properties, and remedial objectives. At many sites, thermal technologies can be combined with less aggressive remediation methods for complete site and plume restoration (see also [[Thermal Remediation - Combined Remedies]]).
  
 
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Revision as of 22:43, 20 November 2020

In situ thermal remediation (ISTR) has gained wide acceptance over the last 20 years. It is now considered an accepted contaminant source reduction technology with a high degree of certainty for achieving remedial objectives. ISTR consists of heating subsurface groundwater and the vadose zone to facilitate volatilization or other contaminant removal mechanisms, followed by contaminant extraction and treatment. The three major ISTR technologies are Steam Enhanced Extraction (SEE), Electrical Resistance Heating (ERH) and Thermal Conduction Heating (TCH). Technology selection depends on specific site conditions, contaminant properties, and remedial objectives. At many sites, thermal technologies can be combined with less aggressive remediation methods for complete site and plume restoration (see also Thermal Remediation - Combined Remedies).

Related Article(s):


CONTRIBUTOR(S): Dr. Gorm Heron


Key Resource(s): How Heat Can Accelerate In-situ Soil and Aquifer Remediation: Important Chemical Properties and Guidance on Choosing the Appropriate Technique[1]

Introduction

ISTR is typically used for source zones where conventional and less costly methods such as [[Chemical Oxidation (In Situ - ISCO) | in situ chemical oxidation and enhanced bioremediation are not effective[2][3][1]. For example, ISTR might be applied to a contaminated site where non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) has migrated to significant depth and constitutes a source zone (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Candidate site for ISTR application with significant NAPL source material.

Most in situ thermal technologies were originally developed and applied in the oil fields to enhance oil recovery. The most widely-used technologies are listed below (Figure 2):

  • Steam Enhanced Extraction (SEE): Steam is generated at the surface and injected into wells, sweeping to extraction wells for liquid and vapor removal[4].
  • Electrical Resistance Heating (ERH): Electrodes deliver electricity and water to the subsurface, and heating occurs as the electricity meets ohmic resistance in the subsurface. Vapors are typically extracted either from the electrodes or from separate extraction wells[5].
  • Thermal Conduction Heating (TCH): Simple heater borings transfer heat (no fluids) to the subsurface, and chemicals are removed by liquid and vapor extraction wells[6].
Figure 2. The three most commonly used in situ thermal technologies. (See text for abbreviation definitions).

Other less commonly used ISTR technologies are hot water injection, radio-frequency heating, and micro-wave heating. For some sites with very high concentrations of hydrocarbons, smoldering may be used to degrade the contamination in place.

Applications and Strengths

There are several major applications and strengths of each of the three main ISTR technologies (Table 1). The major difference between the technologies is that TCH can be used to heat dry soils and to treat semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs), whereas ERH and SEE is limited by the presence of water or soil moisture, and therefore can be used to reach the boiling point water. This limits these technologies for targeting volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and to partially treat SVOCs, since temperatures are not high enough to volatilize and completely remove chemicals such as dioxins, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) or PFAS.

Table 1. Characteristics of the three main thermal technologies.

In general terms, ERH has been used primarily for VOC source zones, where achievement of the boiling point of water is sufficient to remediate volatile contaminants. When applicable, ERH tends to be more energy efficient than TCH and allows for faster heat-up rates TCH. SEE is used in permeable formations and can overcome cooling by groundwater flow. TCH is used in the same settings as ERH, plus at sites where treatment of less volatile contaminants of concern (COCs), such as SVOCs. SEE is readily combined with other ISTR technologies for complex sites with both low permeability zones and significant groundwater flow.

Mechanisms – How are Contaminants of Concern (COCs) Removed?

For volatile contaminants like chlorinated solvents, vaporization is the dominant mechanism for remediation. The vapor pressure and Henry's Law constant for trichloroethylene (TCE) and perchloroethylene (PCE) increase with temperature, leading to chemical vaporization once heated (Figure 3).

Figure 3. Properties of PCE, TCE, and water as a function of temperature[7]. Changes in PCE and TCE properties with increased temperature facilitate contaminant recovery as a vapor.

For oils, tars, creosote and semi-volatile chemicals, viscosity reduction and recovery may also be an important mechanism. These fluids are removed by multi-phase extraction. The heating can be done with any of the three major ISTR methods. For complete removal of these less volatile chemicals, the subsurface needs to be heated to temperatures above the boiling point of water (typically between 200 and 335oC). This can only be accomplished using TCH[6].

Contaminant Extraction and Treatment

Since ISTR involves making chemicals mobile either in liquid or vapor form, extraction and capture is essential. A site-specific analysis must be used to determine the strategy for extraction. Hydraulic control is maintained either by the use of barriers, or more often by extracting more fluids than used for heating and injection. Inward gradients must be maintained and demonstrated during the heating period. Pneumatic control is maintained by using tight vapor covers and by extracting sufficient quantities of air and steam to create a vacuum in the unsaturated part of the treatment zone.

Extracted liquids and vapors are typically cooled, separated, and treated using standard liquid and vapor treatment methods such as gravity separation, charcoal filtration, thermal oxidation, and filtering.

Monitoring During ISTR

During thermal operation, monitoring and sampling efforts are used to document progress[8] as follows:

  • An energy balance is maintained and compared to modeled energy delivery and heating.
  • Subsurface temperatures are documented using thermocouples or similar devices, providing near real-time documentation of the heating process.
  • Mass removal rates and totals are tracked for vapor and liquid streams.
  • Hydraulic and pneumatic control is documented by a combination of well-field gradient measurements and mass balance calculations.

Before completion of ISTR, confirmatory sampling of soil and groundwater is performed to document that the remedial goals have been met. Tested methods for hot sampling exist[9].

Summary

At many sites, in situ thermal technologies have provided an answer to a major challenge: How to treat heavily contaminated source zones to low standards? The three dominant methods (SEE, ERH, TCH) have now been used at >300 sites. When site conditions are well understood, and the thermal system properly implemented, results have been very positive (i.e., remediation goals have been achieved). These technologies have matured so that they are no longer innovative and results are predictable.

References

  1. ^ 1.0 1.1 Davis, E.L., 1997. How heat can accelerate in-situ soil and aquifer remediation: important chemical properties and guidance on choosing the appropriate technique. US EPA Issue Paper. Report pdf
  2. ^ Hunt, J.R., Sitar, N. and Udell, K.S., 1988. Nonaqueous phase liquid transport and cleanup: 1. Analysis of mechanisms. Water Resources Research, 24(8), 1247-1258. doi: 10.1029/WR024i008p01247
  3. ^ Udell, K.S., 1996. Heat and mass transfer in clean-up of underground toxic wastes. In annual reviews of heat transfer, Vol. 7, Chang-Lin Tien, Ed.; Begell House, Inc.: New York, Wallingford, UK, pgs. 333-405. doi: 10.1615/AnnualRevHeatTransfer.v7.80
  4. ^ Udell, K.S., Sitar, N., Hunt, J.R. and Stewart Jr, L.D., 1991. Process for in situ decontamination of subsurface soil and groundwater. The Regents of The University of California, U.S. Patent 5,018,576.
  5. ^ Gauglitz, P.; Roberts, J.; Bergman, T.; Schalla, R.; Caley, S.; Schlender, M.; Heath, W.; Jarosch, T.; Miller, M.; Eddy-Dilek, C.; Moss, R.; Looney, B., 1994. Six-phase soil heating for enhanced removal of contaminants: Volatile organic compounds in non-arid soils. Integrated demonstration, Savannah River Site. Report No. PNL-10184, UC-406. Pacific Northwest Laboratory, California, USA. doi: 10.2172/10193982
  6. ^ 6.0 6.1 Stegemeier, G.L. and Vinegar, H.J., 2001. Thermal conduction heating for in-situ thermal desorption of soils. Chapter, 4, 1-37. In Chang H. Oh (ed.), Hazardous and Radioactive Waste Treatment Technol. Handbook, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL. ISBN 9780849395864
  7. ^ Heron, G., Baker, R.S., Bierschenk, J.M. and LaChance, J.C., 2006. Heat it All the Way-Mechanisms and Results Achieved using In-Situ Thermal Remediation. In Paper F-13, in: Bruce M. Sass (Conference Chair), Remediation of Chlorinated and Recalcitrant Compounds. Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Remediation of Chlorinated and Recalcitrant Compounds, Monterey, CA. ISBN 1-57477-157-4
  8. ^ Newmark, R.L. (ed.) 1994. Demonstration of Dynamic Underground Stripping at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Gasoline Spill Site. Final Report UCRL-ID-116964, Vol. 1-4. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California.
  9. ^ Gaberell, M., Gavaskar, A., Drescher, E., Sminchak, J., Cumming, L., Yoon, W.S. and De Silva, S., 2002. Soil core characterization strategy at DNAPL sites subjected to strong thermal or chemical remediation, In: A.R. Gavaskar and A.S.C. Chen (Eds.). Remediation of Chlorinated and Recalcitrant Compounds. Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Remediation of Chlorinated and Recalcitrant Compounds (Monterey, CA). Battelle Press, Columbus, OH. ISBN 1-57477-132-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2003.09.006

See Also