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      In Situ Sediment Treatment Using Activated Carbon: A Demonstrated Sediment Cleanup Technology

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          Abstract

          This paper reviews general approaches for applying activated carbon (AC) amendments as an in situ sediment treatment remedy. In situ sediment treatment involves targeted placement of amendments using installation options that fall into two general approaches: 1) directly applying a thin layer of amendments (which potentially incorporates weighting or binding materials) to surface sediment, with or without initial mixing; and 2) incorporating amendments into a premixed, blended cover material of clean sand or sediment, which is also applied to the sediment surface. Over the past decade, pilot- or full-scale field sediment treatment projects using AC—globally recognized as one of the most effective sorbents for organic contaminants—were completed or were underway at more than 25 field sites in the United States, Norway, and the Netherlands. Collectively, these field projects (along with numerous laboratory experiments) have demonstrated the efficacy of AC for in situ treatment in a range of contaminated sediment conditions. Results from experimental studies and field applications indicate that in situ sequestration and immobilization treatment of hydrophobic organic compounds using either installation approach can reduce porewater concentrations and biouptake significantly, often becoming more effective over time due to progressive mass transfer. Certain conditions, such as use in unstable sediment environments, should be taken into account to maximize AC effectiveness over long time periods. In situ treatment is generally less disruptive and less expensive than traditional sediment cleanup technologies such as dredging or isolation capping. Proper site-specific balancing of the potential benefits, risks, ecological effects, and costs of in situ treatment technologies (in this case, AC) relative to other sediment cleanup technologies is important to successful full-scale field application. Extensive experimental studies and field trials have shown that when applied correctly, in situ treatment via contaminant sequestration and immobilization using a sorbent material such as AC has progressed from an innovative sediment remediation approach to a proven, reliable technology. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2015; 11:195–207. © 2014 The Authors. Published 2014 SETAC.

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          Quantification of the Dilute Sedimentary Soot Phase:  Implications for PAH Speciation and Bioavailability

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            In-situ Sorbent Amendments: A New Direction in Contaminated Sediment Management

            The accumulation of harmful and persistent organic molecules in soils and sediment is a major environmental concern. Removal by physical means such as riverine, lacustrine, or marine dredging can be prohibitively difficult, expensive, and may not ultimately prove effective. An alternative is to locally change the geochemistry to stabilize and sequester the contaminants and render them biologically unavailable. Ghosh et al. report on pilot projects to determine whether activated carbon would be so useful. Their Feature concludes with what more needs to be done to minimize anthropogenic chemical blights in soil and sediments.
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              Field application of activated carbon amendment for in-situ stabilization of polychlorinated biphenyls in marine sediment.

              We report results on the first field-scale application of activated carbon (AC) amendment to contaminated sediment for in-situ stabilization of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). The test was performed on a tidal mud flat at South Basin, adjacent to the former Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, San Francisco Bay, CA. The major goals of the field study were to (1) assess scale up of the AC mixing technology using two available, large-scale devices, (2) validate the effectiveness of the AC amendment at the field scale, and (3) identify possible adverse effects of the remediation technology. Also, the test allowed comparison among monitoring tools, evaluation of longer-term effectiveness of AC amendment, and identification of field-related factors that confound the performance of in-situ biological assessments. Following background pretreatment measurements, we successfully incorporated AC into sediment to a nominal 30 cm depth during a single mixing event, as confirmed by total organic carbon and black carbon contents in the designated test plots. The measured AC dose averaged 2.0-3.2 wt% and varied depending on sampling locations and mixing equipment. AC amendment did not impact sediment resuspension or PCB release into the water column over the treatment plots, nor adversely impactthe existing macro benthic community composition, richness, or diversity. The PCB bioaccumulation in marine clams was reduced when exposed to sediment treated with 2% AC in comparison to the control plot Field-deployed semi permeable membrane devices and polyethylene devices showed about 50% reduction in PCB uptake in AC-treated sediment and similar reduction in estimated pore-water PCB concentration. This reduction was evident even after 13-month post-treatment with then 7 months of continuous exposure, indicating AC treatment efficacy was retained for an extended period. Aqueous equilibrium PCB concentrations and PCB desorption showed an AC-dose response. Field-exposed AC after 18 months retained a strong stabilization capability to reduce aqueous equilibrium PCB concentrations by about 90%, which also supports the long-term effectiveness of AC in the field. Additional mixing during or after AC deployment, increasing AC dose, reducing AC-particle size, and sequential deployment of AC dose will likely improve AC-sediment contact and overall effectiveness. The reductions in PCB availability observed with slow mass transfer under field conditions calls for predictive models to assess the long-term trends in pore-water PCB concentrations and the benefits of alternative in-situ AC application and mixing strategies.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Integr Environ Assess Manag
                Integr Environ Assess Manag
                ieam
                Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management
                BlackWell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                1551-3777
                1551-3793
                April 2015
                06 January 2015
                : 11
                : 2
                : 195-207
                Affiliations
                []Anchor QEA Seattle, Washington, USA
                [§ ]University of Maryland Baltimore County Baltimore, Maryland, USA
                []Anchor QEA Amesbury, Massachusetts, USA
                [# ]Exponent Alexandria, Virginia, USA
                [†† ]Stanford University Stanford, California, USA
                [‡‡ ]US Environmental Protection Agency Edison, New Jersey
                [§§ ]Norwegian Geotechnical Institute, Oslo Norway
                [∥∥ ]Norwegian University of Life Sciences Ås, Norway
                [## ]AquaBlok Toledo, Ohio, USA
                [††† ]BioBlok Solutions Sandefjord, Norway
                [‡‡‡ ]Parsons Syracuse, New York, USA
                [§§§ ]AECOM Chelmsford, Massachusetts, USA
                [∥∥∥ ]Anchor QEA Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey, USA
                Author notes
                * Address correspondence to: cpatmont@ 123456anchorqea.com

                All Supplemental Data may be found in the online version of this article.

                Article
                10.1002/ieam.1589
                4409844
                25323491
                87134651-3438-46db-aaf1-e47fa909285d
                © 2014 The Authors. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of SETAC.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.

                History
                : 21 April 2014
                : 16 June 2014
                : 08 October 2014
                Categories
                Critical Review

                General environmental science
                activated carbon,sediment,in situ treatment,bioavailability,remediation

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