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Further description:-
Remediation options
Further Description |
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Remediation is considered as the management of
the contaminant at a site so as to prevent, minimize or mitigate damage to
human health, property or the environment. It is a broader term than clean up
in that remediation options can include physical actions such as removal,
destruction and containment. Development and use of remediation technologies
have progressed and a large number of clean-up alternatives have evolved and
improved over the past decade.
The in-situ and ex-situ section of this digest
outlines the major clean-up technologies which have become well-established in
the commercial soil remediation sector. Diagrams accompany each technology
description to provide a more vivid picture. References are also included in
the library, should the user require more specific information and soil
remediation cases.
Classes of soil remediation
Two distinct classes of soil remediation can be
defined:
ü
in-situ
ü ex-situ (with on-site and off-site
interventions).
In-situ cleanups - meaning that no excavation of
the contaminated soil occurs - are often preferred because they are generally
less expensive. However, they generally take a longer time to effect treatment
to the desired limits and there is less certainty about the uniformity of
treatment because of the inherent variability in soil and aquifer
characteristics and difficulty in monitoring progress. On the other hand,
excavating a contaminated area (ex-situ
approach) and treating the material on the same site (ex-situ, on-site) or transporting it to a
remote site for cleaning (ex-situ, off-site) can often be more complicated and expensive.
Nevertheless, ex-situ
remediation has the added bonus of taking the bulk of contaminants away before
they can spread further. It also allows homogenization of the contaminated soil
before treatment and ensures monitoring so that soils are cleaned to the
desired limits within a relatively short time. Some technologies can have both in-situ
and ex-situ applications. While the principle of the technique
remains the same, the technological set-up differs. In this digest, four (4)
technologies are presented which can be applied as in-situ, as
well as, ex-situ. The illustration for each technology indicates
the different technological installation.
Categories of remediation technologies
In general, remediation technologies can be grouped into
categories based on their treatment mechanism: biological, physical, chemical, electrical,
and thermal. These are further subdivided into in situ and ex situ
processes (as indicated above). However, in this digest, physical, chemical and
electrical mechanisms have been abridged into one group, called
physico-chemical, because these mechanisms normally occur together and overlap
in the treatment process. “Thermal” has been listed separately because the
driving force for the decontamination is heat.
The various techniques usually work well when applied to a
specific type of soil pollution, though no readily available treatments were
implemented that could clean all types of pollutants. Due to the complex nature
of many polluted soils and the fact that pollution, in many situations, is due
to the presence of a “cocktail” of different types of contaminants, it is
frequently necessary to apply several remediation techniques (treatment train) to
reduce the concentrations of pollutants to acceptable levels.
Biological Treatments
Biological treatment is a process whereby contaminants in soil,
sediments, sludge or groundwater are transformed or degraded into innocuous
substances such as carbon dioxide, water, fatty acids and biomass, through the
action of microbial metabolism.
Biological processes are typically implemented at low cost.
Contaminants can be destroyed and often little to no residual treatment is
required. However, the process requires more time and it is difficult, in
general, to determine whether contaminants have been completely destroyed.
Additionally, microbes may often be sensitive to toxins or highly concentrated
contaminants in the soil.
Physico-Chemical Treatments
Physico-chemical treatments use the physical
and/or chemical and/or electrical properties of the contaminants or of the
contaminated medium to destroy (i.e., chemically convert), separate, or contain
the contamination. In the physical processes the phase transfer of pollutants
is induced. In the chemical processes the chemical structure (and then the
behaviour) of the pollutants is changed by means of chemical reactions to
produce less toxic or better separable compounds from the solid matrix.
These treatments are typically
cost effective and can be completed in short time periods (in comparison with
biological treatment). Equipment is readily available and is generally not
engineering or energy-intensive.
Certain in-situ physico-chemical treatment
technologies are sensitive to certain soil parameters. For example, the
presence of clay or humic materials in soil causes variations in horizontal and
vertical hydraulic parameters, which, in turn, cause variations in physicao-chemical
process performance.
Thermal Treatments
Thermal treatments, where the driving force of the process is
heat, generally offer quick cleanup times but are typically the most costly
treatment group. This difference, however, is less in ex-situ applications than in in-situ applications. Cost is driven by energy and equipment
costs and is both capital and Operation & Maintenance (O & M)
intensive.
Thermal processes use heat to increase the volatility, to burn,
decompose, destroy or melt the contaminants.
Cleaning soil with thermal methods may take only a few months or
several years. The time it takes depends on three major factors that vary from
site to site: type and amounts of chemicals present; size and depth of the
polluted area; type of soil and conditions present.
 
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