Effect of scale and dimensionality on the surfactant-enhanced solubilization of a residual DNAPL contamination
Abstract:
The mass transfer rate from residual dense non-aqueous phase liquids (DNAPLs) to the mobile aqueous phase is an important parameter for the efficiency of surfactant-enhanced remediation through solubilization of this type of contamination. The mass transfer kinetics are highly dependent on the dimensionality of the system. In this study, irregularly shaped residual TCE saturations in two-dimensional saturated flow fields were flushed with a 2% polyoxyethylene sorbitan (20) monooleate (POESMO) solution until complete removal had been achieved. A numerical model was developed and used for the simulation of the various surfactant-flushing experiments with different initial saturation patterns and flow rates. Through optimization against in situ concentration and saturation data, a phenomenological power-law model for the relationship between the mass transfer rate from the DNAPL to the mobile aqueous phase on the one hand and the residual DNAPL saturation and the flow velocity on the other hand was derived. The obtained mass transfer rate parameters provide a reasonable fit to the experimental data, pbkp_redicting the cleanup time and the general saturation and concentration pattern quite well but failing to pbkp_redict the concentration curves at every individual sampling port. The obtained mass transfer rate model gives smaller values for the pbkp_redicted mass transfer rate but shows a comparable dependence on water flow and saturation as in earlier published one-dimensional column experiments with identical characteristics for porous medium, DNAPL and surfactant. Mass transfer rate pbkp_redictions were about one order of magnitude lower in the 2-D flow cell experiment than in 1-D column experiments. These results give an indication for the importance of dimensionality during surfactant remediation. © 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Año de publicación:
2004
Keywords:
- DNAPLs
- Dimensionality
- Surfactants
- SCALE
- Modeling
Fuente:


Tipo de documento:
Article
Estado:
Acceso restringido
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Ingeniería ambiental
- Química ambiental
- Ciencia ambiental
Áreas temáticas:
- Otros problemas y servicios sociales
- Química física
- Ingeniería sanitaria