Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Threshold amounts of organic carbon needed to initiate reductive dechlorination in groundwater systems

View through CrossRef
AbstractAquifer sediment and groundwater chemistry data from 15 Department of Defense facilities located throughout the United States were collected and analyzed with the goal of estimating the amount of natural organic carbon needed to initiate reductive dechlorination in groundwater systems. Aquifer sediments were analyzed for hydroxylamine and NaOH‐extractable organic carbon, yielding a probable underestimate of potentially bioavailable organic carbon (PBOC). Aquifer sediments were also analyzed for total organic carbon (TOC) using an elemental combustion analyzer, yielding a probable overestimate of bioavailable carbon. Concentrations of PBOC correlated linearly with TOC with a slope near one. However, concentrations of PBOC were consistently five to ten times lower than TOC. When mean concentrations of dissolved oxygen observed at each site were plotted versus PBOC, it showed that anoxic conditions were initiated at approximately 200 mg/kg of PBOC. Similarly, the accumulation of reductive dechlorination daughter products relative to parent compounds increased at a PBOC concentration of approximately 200 mg/kg. Concentrations of total hydrolysable amino acids (THAA) in sediments also increased at approximately 200 mg/kg, and bioassays showed that sediment CO2 production correlated positively with THAA. The results of this study provide an estimate for threshold amounts of bioavailable carbon present in aquifer sediments (approximately 200 mg/kg of PBOC; approximately 1,000 to 2,000 mg/kg of TOC) needed to support reductive dechlorination in groundwater systems. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Title: Threshold amounts of organic carbon needed to initiate reductive dechlorination in groundwater systems
Description:
AbstractAquifer sediment and groundwater chemistry data from 15 Department of Defense facilities located throughout the United States were collected and analyzed with the goal of estimating the amount of natural organic carbon needed to initiate reductive dechlorination in groundwater systems.
Aquifer sediments were analyzed for hydroxylamine and NaOH‐extractable organic carbon, yielding a probable underestimate of potentially bioavailable organic carbon (PBOC).
Aquifer sediments were also analyzed for total organic carbon (TOC) using an elemental combustion analyzer, yielding a probable overestimate of bioavailable carbon.
Concentrations of PBOC correlated linearly with TOC with a slope near one.
However, concentrations of PBOC were consistently five to ten times lower than TOC.
When mean concentrations of dissolved oxygen observed at each site were plotted versus PBOC, it showed that anoxic conditions were initiated at approximately 200 mg/kg of PBOC.
Similarly, the accumulation of reductive dechlorination daughter products relative to parent compounds increased at a PBOC concentration of approximately 200 mg/kg.
Concentrations of total hydrolysable amino acids (THAA) in sediments also increased at approximately 200 mg/kg, and bioassays showed that sediment CO2 production correlated positively with THAA.
The results of this study provide an estimate for threshold amounts of bioavailable carbon present in aquifer sediments (approximately 200 mg/kg of PBOC; approximately 1,000 to 2,000 mg/kg of TOC) needed to support reductive dechlorination in groundwater systems.
© 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Related Results

Characterizing Groundwater Quality, Recharge and Distribution under Anthropogenic conditions
Characterizing Groundwater Quality, Recharge and Distribution under Anthropogenic conditions
Awareness concerning sustainable groundwater management is gaining traction and calls for adequate understanding of the complexities of natural and anthropogenic processes and how ...
Investigation of Reductive Dechlorination Supported by Natural Organic Carbon
Investigation of Reductive Dechlorination Supported by Natural Organic Carbon
AbstractBecause remediation timeframes using monitored natural attenuation may span decades or even centuries at chlorinated solvent sites, new approaches are needed to assess the ...
Forecasting Net Groundwater Depletion in Well Irrigation Areas with Long Short-term Memory Networks
Forecasting Net Groundwater Depletion in Well Irrigation Areas with Long Short-term Memory Networks
<p>Due to the scarcity of available surface water, many irrigated areas in North China Plain (NCP) heavily rely on groundwater, which has resulted in groundwater over...
Characteristics of groundwater circulation and evolution in Yanhe spring basin driven by coal mining
Characteristics of groundwater circulation and evolution in Yanhe spring basin driven by coal mining
Abstract The Yanhe spring basin located in the Jindong coal base is relatively short of water resources and the ecological environment is fragile. With the large-scale mini...
Indicator-based assessment of groundwater resources sustainability in South Korea
Indicator-based assessment of groundwater resources sustainability in South Korea
Groundwater level decline and quality deterioration is continuously observed nationwide in South Korea. Meanwhile, the demand for groundwater, which is relatively stable and clean ...
Epicontinental seas as efficient carbon sinks: proto-Paratethys & West Siberian seas during the PETM
Epicontinental seas as efficient carbon sinks: proto-Paratethys & West Siberian seas during the PETM
<p>Removal of carbon on geological timescales is generally assumed to be governed by the relative strength of silicate weathering and organic carbon burial. For past ...
Origins of Groundwater Inferred from Isotopic Patterns of the Badain Jaran Desert, Northwestern China
Origins of Groundwater Inferred from Isotopic Patterns of the Badain Jaran Desert, Northwestern China
There are many viewpoints about the sources of groundwater in the Badain Jaran Desert (BJD), such as precipitation and snowmelt from the Qilian Mountains (the upper reaches [UR] of...
Groundwater Vulnerability Assessment in the Huangshui River Basin Under Representative Environmental Change
Groundwater Vulnerability Assessment in the Huangshui River Basin Under Representative Environmental Change
The Huangshui River Basin is located in the transition zone between the Loess Plateau and the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, characterized by a fragile hydrological and ecological environm...

Back to Top