Biobarriers (BBs) are a new type of in situ technology for the remediation of contaminated groundwater. In this work results of laboratory experiments on a BB system are discussed. First, a proper filling material for BB applications was selected among four possible granular materials (perlite, pumice, expanded clay, activated carbon), based on the physical-chemical properties affecting the BB performance and the bacterial adhesion capacity. Based on the results, pumice was selected as the filling material for the second part of the work, during which a laboratory column test was carried out without inoculation. Physical-chemical parameters (temperature, dissolved oxygen concentration, pH and specific electric conductivity) and pollutant concentrations (BTEX, MTBE, tert-butyl alcohol, 1,2,4-trimetylbenzene, naphthalene) were measured in water samples collected from eight piezometers uniformly distributed along the column length. Molecular microbiological analyses were also carried out on pumice before and after the treatment to assess the differences in the bacterial community. Different decreasing trends in the pollutant concentration along the column were observed for the different groups of contaminants that found explanation in the distribution of the different microbial populations throughout the column. © 201 WIT Press.
Saponaro, S., Careghini, A., Romele, L., Sezenna, E., Franzetti, A., Gandolfi, I., et al. (2012). Remediation of groundwater polluted by gasoline-derived compounds with biobarriers. In C.A. Brebbia (a cura di), Water Pollution XI - 11th International Conference on Modelling, Monitoring and Management of Water Pollution, Wessex Inst Technol, New Forest Campus, England, Jul 10-12, 2012 (pp. 439-449). WIT Press [10.2495/WP120381].
Remediation of groundwater polluted by gasoline-derived compounds with biobarriers
FRANZETTI, ANDREA;GANDOLFI, ISABELLA;DAGHIO, MATTEOPenultimo
;BESTETTI, GIUSEPPINAUltimo
2012
Abstract
Biobarriers (BBs) are a new type of in situ technology for the remediation of contaminated groundwater. In this work results of laboratory experiments on a BB system are discussed. First, a proper filling material for BB applications was selected among four possible granular materials (perlite, pumice, expanded clay, activated carbon), based on the physical-chemical properties affecting the BB performance and the bacterial adhesion capacity. Based on the results, pumice was selected as the filling material for the second part of the work, during which a laboratory column test was carried out without inoculation. Physical-chemical parameters (temperature, dissolved oxygen concentration, pH and specific electric conductivity) and pollutant concentrations (BTEX, MTBE, tert-butyl alcohol, 1,2,4-trimetylbenzene, naphthalene) were measured in water samples collected from eight piezometers uniformly distributed along the column length. Molecular microbiological analyses were also carried out on pumice before and after the treatment to assess the differences in the bacterial community. Different decreasing trends in the pollutant concentration along the column were observed for the different groups of contaminants that found explanation in the distribution of the different microbial populations throughout the column. © 201 WIT Press.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.