Lowland Technology International
Vol 2 No 2, Dec (2000)

A NEW TECHNOLOGY FOR REMEDIATION OF CONTAMINATED SITES IN LOWLAND AREAS

Somasundaram Valliappan (Unknown)
Nasser Khalili (Unknown)
R. K. Niven (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
01 Dec 2000

Abstract

A new in situ remediation, method, uplow washing, is describedin which contaminants are removed by an upward fluidizing flow of water and/or gas produced by a jet inserted into a granular contaminated formation. Contaminant removal is achieved by the buoyant release of NAPL droplets and elutriation of finer particles. Experiments on contaminant removal by fluidization within a controlled column indicate significant reductions in diesel levels (95-99,9%) may be achieved by gas-liquid uplow washing (GLUW), for a wide range of initial diesel concentrations (10,000 to 150,000 mg/kg) and for soil fines contents of zero to 10%. In uniform sands, the water and gas velocities exmined during GLUW have no significant bearing on diesel remediation efficiency, suggesting that water velocities may be reduced to a level at which the fluidized bed is largely gas-supported. Significant reductions in lead concentrations (59-88%) from soils containing 1,500-1,960 mg/kg precipitated lead may also be achieved by GLUW.

Copyrights © 2000






Journal Info

Abbrev

ialt_lti

Publisher

Subject

Civil Engineering, Building, Construction & Architecture Engineering Transportation

Description

The Lowland Technology International Journal presents activity and research developments in Geotechnical Engineering, Water Resources Engineering, Structural Engineering, Transportation Engineering, Urban Planning, Coastal Engineering, Disaster Prevention and Mitigation ...