Title: Groundwater Contamination from Leaking UST
1??? ???? ?????? ??????
???? ?????? ??????? ?????? ?? ???????? ?? ??????
?????? ???????? ?????? ??? ??????? ???????
2Groundwater Contamination from Leaking USTs
Prevention versus Restoration
Mohammad Al-Suwaiyan Civil Engineering
Department King Fahd University of Petroleum
Minerals
3Presentation Layout
- Introduction
- Complexity of groundwater Contamination
Assessment - need for modeling
- associated difficulties, uncertainties
41,400,000,000,000,000,000 m3
51,400,000,000,000,000,000 m3 3.7
37,500,000,000,000,000 m3
6(No Transcript)
71,400,000,000,000,000,000 m3 3.7
37,500,000,000,000,000 m3 23
8,300,000,000,000,000 m3
8(No Transcript)
91,400,000,000,000,000,000 m3 3.7
37,500,000,000,000,000 m3 23
8,300,000,000,000,000 m3 1.5
126,250,000,000,000 m3
10(No Transcript)
11 Distance to sun 150,000,000 km
125 million
13Background
- Ground water a main source of potable water
- Contamination of ground water
-
- Hydrocarbon leaks and associated problems
14(No Transcript)
15Laws related to GW contamination
- Legislations related to air or SW pollution were
enacted in 1940s and 50s - 1980 CERCLA or superfund act was passed
establishing 15 billion to pay for clean up of
abandoned hazardous waste sites which can be
recovered by EPA from responsible parties - What is the reason for the time lag?
16Leaking
Residual hydrocarbon
Tank
Mobile hydrocarbon
Ground-water flow
17Leaking
Residual hydrocarbon
Tank
Mobile hydrocarbon
Ground-water flow
18Leaking
Residual hydrocarbon
Tank
zone
Mobile hydrocarbon
Vadose
Water table
Hydrocarbon components
dissolved in ground-water
Ground-water flow
Saturated zone
19How Can a Hydrocarbon Exist
- Residual phase held by capillary adsorptive
forces - Vapor phase
- Free phase
- Dissolved in groundwater
20Typical Phase Distribution After Spill
21Important Notes
- Due to the hidden nature of the subsurface
environment many think it will degrade any
contaminant given enough time. - Contaminants that enter the subsurface will
eventually make it to the aquifer. - Remediation and cleanup of subsurface became an
important issue.
22Factors Influencing Fluids Distribution
- Soil Hydraulic Properties
- Displacement head
- Pore size distribution index
- Residual saturation
-
23Factors Influencing Fluids Distribution Continued
- Fluid Properties
- density
- Surface tension
- Viscosity
- Solubility
- Volatility
-
24How is a spill discovered?
- Accidental detection
- Product could appear in a monitoring well
- Is using monitoring wells effective measure?
25Monitoring Well
Air
Oil
Water
26Problems associated with using MW to detect leaks
- Free product may not appear in MW even with
significant LNAPL in formation - LNAPL thickness in MW varies with the condition
of the water table - Sudden appearance and disappearance of LNAPL in
MW is observed in the field
27Conclusion
Monitoring wells are easy to install and to use
but they are not reliable methods to detect and
quantify LNAPL leaks
28Remediation Project
- Control source
- Complete site characterization
- Design remediation process system
- Evaluate effectiveness
29Remediation Project
- Control source
- Complete site characterization
- Design remediation process system
- Evaluate effectiveness
- CAN ANY OF THE ABOVE BE DONE WITHOUT THE HELP OF
MODELING?
30Modeling needs 1) Water flow model 2) Dissolved
pollutant model 3) Model to handle various phases
31Water flow model
Using water mass balance and Darcy equation a
Water flow model can be developed However it has
limitations and its results will influence
performance of next models
32Groundwater modelingflow equation
K exhibits large variation that is impossible to
represent which leads to non accurate velocity
field
33Dissolved pollutant model
Using mass balance for each species and
including Various influencing processes a model
capable of prediction distribution of dissolved
pollutant model can be developed However it has
limitations and its results will influence
design and operation of treatment system
34Contaminant Transport modelingtransport of
dissolved contaminants
Processes that can be included dispersion,
advection, reactions, Sorption kinetics.. How
close can we represent the actual
processes? Velocity field from flow model is
input to this model.
35Contaminant Transport Mechanisms
- Advection contaminant is carried with flowing
water - Flow velocity
- Solubility
- Hydrodynamic Dispersion spreading of
contaminants - Concentration gradient
- heterogeneity
36Attenuation Mechanisms
- Adsorption
- Retardation factor
- Reaction
- Decay
- Oxidation/reduction
- Biodegradation
37Modeling various phases
This is the most difficult part of modeling but
it can Be done as shown in the next
slide, However modeling real life cases is
impossible i.e. modelingit has limitations and
its results will influence design and operation
of treatment system
38Modeling Different PhasesContaminants as
distinct phases
For each phase similar equation will have to be
solved along With proper auxiliary and boundary,
initial conditions
39Conclusion 1
- Modeling is an essential tool for aquifer
assessment remediation
40Conclusion 2
- Results obtained by modeling are rarely accurate
which directly affects the effort for remediation
41Conclusion 3
- Verifying model prediction are practically
impossible due to the nature of the subsurface
environment
42Subsurface restoration
43Remediation Priority
- Stop bleeding Control source
- Know subsurface figure out extent
- Develop implement cleanup plan
-
44Sources
- leaking tanks
- Free product (Mobile phase)
- Residual phase
45Subsurface Extent
- challenging and difficult
- hidden nature
- inherited heterogeneity
- Naturally will involve heavy modeling
46Cleanup planning
- mobile phase
- Pump-and-treat
- Number of wells
- Locations
- Flow rates and time variations
- All are selected through modeling
47Cleanup planning
- residual phase (potential sources) SVE
- Through promoting mass transfer to vapor phase
then extraction - How close can actual processes be modeled
- Enhancing biodegradation IBD
- How close can the behavior of microorganisms be
modeled - Operation variables are selected through modeling
48Cleanup process complicating factors
- Initial moisture distribution
- Natural heterogeneity
- process may trigger worse situation through
creation of new channels which facilitate
contaminant transport
49Supporting reports
- NRC committee on groundwater cleanup alternatives
investigated 77 sites in which treatment
processes were conducted for a long time - Only 8 sites reached cleanup goals
- In some cases the situation became worse
50Case of Brunswick,N.J.
- Subsurface contamination by a computer company
was discovered - After 6 years of Cleanup the process was stopped
thinking it was complete - After 3 years contamination came back worse than
ever before
51Conclusion
- Characterization, analysis, design and operation
of cleanup systems relies heavily on modeling - Subsurface clean-up process is usually
difficult, costly and has very low success rate
52Recommendation
- More effort should be given to prevention
- Meaningful regulation to the process of design,
installation, monitoring and maintenance of USTs
should be developed
53THANK YOU