Development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - Permeable Reactive Barrier Data

The contamination of soils by heavy metals is a problem that faces communities the world over. Contamination is of particular concern when it is mobilised into ground and surface waters, where it can migrate into rivers, lakes and the marine environment. Clean up of contaminated sites can exacerbate...

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Other Authors: STEVENS, GEOFFREY (hasPrincipalInvestigator), STEVENS, GEOFFREY (processor), MUMFORD, KATHRYN ANNE (processor), Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Australian Antarctic Data Centre
Subjects:
PRB
Online Access:https://researchdata.edu.au/development-application-technologies-reactive-barrier/699662
https://doi.org/10.4225/15/55669BCF5AF2A
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1300_PRB
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699662
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic environment
geoscientificInformation
inlandWaters
CONTAMINANT LEVELS/SPILLS
EARTH SCIENCE
HUMAN DIMENSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
WATER MANAGEMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE/MANAGEMENT
CONTAMINANTS
TERRESTRIAL HYDROSPHERE
WATER QUALITY/WATER CHEMISTRY
PETROLEUM
SOLID EARTH
EARTH GASES/LIQUIDS
PRB
Permeable Reactive Barrier
Fuel
FIELD INVESTIGATION
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Casey Station Area
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
spellingShingle environment
geoscientificInformation
inlandWaters
CONTAMINANT LEVELS/SPILLS
EARTH SCIENCE
HUMAN DIMENSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
WATER MANAGEMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE/MANAGEMENT
CONTAMINANTS
TERRESTRIAL HYDROSPHERE
WATER QUALITY/WATER CHEMISTRY
PETROLEUM
SOLID EARTH
EARTH GASES/LIQUIDS
PRB
Permeable Reactive Barrier
Fuel
FIELD INVESTIGATION
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Casey Station Area
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
Development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - Permeable Reactive Barrier Data
topic_facet environment
geoscientificInformation
inlandWaters
CONTAMINANT LEVELS/SPILLS
EARTH SCIENCE
HUMAN DIMENSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
WATER MANAGEMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE/MANAGEMENT
CONTAMINANTS
TERRESTRIAL HYDROSPHERE
WATER QUALITY/WATER CHEMISTRY
PETROLEUM
SOLID EARTH
EARTH GASES/LIQUIDS
PRB
Permeable Reactive Barrier
Fuel
FIELD INVESTIGATION
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Casey Station Area
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
description The contamination of soils by heavy metals is a problem that faces communities the world over. Contamination is of particular concern when it is mobilised into ground and surface waters, where it can migrate into rivers, lakes and the marine environment. Clean up of contaminated sites can exacerbate water pollution by enabling previously immobilised heavy metals to be exposed to water sources. The development of adsorption technologies and permeable reactive barriers to remove mobilised pollutants from ground and surface waters, will prevent the spread of contamination from contaminated sites. The objectives of this research are to develop technology for the containment and treatment of metal contaminated waters at contaminated sites in Antarctica. In this proposal we intend to develop the use of permeable reactive barrier (PRB) technologies for the in situ containment of metal contaminants dispersed from abandoned waste disposal sites, such as at Wilkes and Davis. The scientific findings of this proposal in the years 2003 -2008 indicate that the general principle of cold regions PRB's are sound, but the performance of off the shelf granular media, such as zeolites, are adversely affected by low temperature and freezing. These factors reduce the capacity and kinetics of metal uptake. Zeolites are also limited to the adsorption of metal cations and for example do not adsorb oxy metal anions such as arsenic, chromium etc, which also occur in these areas. Therefore before this technology is applied in Antarctica, modification or development of new material that is robust and predictable in its performance and able to stabilise a broader range of materials in freezing environments is required. Thus the scientific aims of this proposal are 1. To develop PRB materials applicable for deployment in the Antarctic environment 2. To develop predictive models for predicting the performance of the PRBs A permeable reactive barrier (PRB) was built and installed in way of a fuel spill located at the Casey Station Main Power House (MPH). This PRB consisted of five cages and was filled with different materials designed to bind and degrade fuel. Each cage had eight multi-ports (MP) throughout its length from which water samples were extracted at different depths, and alongside material samples collected i.e. cage 1 - MP1 to MP 8, Cage 2 - MP9 to MP16. This spreadsheet contains analytical results from 2005 to 2009. Following are some explanations of the spreadsheets available as part of the download file: 1) PRB Samples - a summary of information i.e. Sample Tracking Database Barcode, label given by sampler, sample type. 2) Nutrients - Water extractable and Potassium Chloride extractable ion concentrations in the PRB material samples given on a dry matter basis (mg/kg). 3) Samples soil only - a summary of samples of material taken from the PRB 4) TPH and total P - Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (from C9 to C28) and Total Phosphorous concentrations in the PRB material samples given in a dry matter basis (mg/kg) 5) Water Samples - ion concentrations in water samples taken from the barrier from water samples (barcodes link to the summary information) 6) Total P - Total Phosphorous 7) Waters TPH - Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons Total P - Total Phosphorous DMB - Dry Matter Basis DMF - Dry Matter Fraction Co-ordinates for the four corners of the lower PRB in lat long: 110 31' 31.672" E 66 16' 54.151" S 110 31' 31.816" E 66 16' 54.129" S 110 31' 32.044" E 66 16' 54.266" S 110 31' 31.903" E 66 16' 54.303" S All samples were collected within one square metre of these locations. This work was also associated with ASAC project 2570 (ASAC_2570) - Constraints on hydrocarbon adsorption and nutrient release from zeolites at low temperatures for hydrocarbon remediation in Antarctica. Project 2570 had the following objectives: Project objectives: The objectives of this research are to further develop low temperature technologies for the containment and remediation of hydrocarbon contaminated waters at contaminated sites in Antarctica. This process requires the examination and development of a number of materials for use in permeable (bio-) reactive barriers and landfarming trials. This process includes; (i) quantification of the nutrient holding capacities of a number of controlled release nutrient products (CRNs); (ii) determination of binary and multi-component exchange equilibria of exchangeable cations with nutrients loaded onto exchange material at low temperatures; (iii) modelling of exchange equilibria using a novel two parameter temperature dependent semi-empirical thermodynamic model; (iv) undertaking dynamic studies and modelling involving exchange material; (v) quantification of adsorption characteristics of Special Antarctic Blend diesel (SAB) emulsions onto barrier media at low temperatures; (vi) the development and understanding of superior hydrocarbon adsorption materials including covalently bonded surfactant modified zeolites and chitson coated sand (vii) determining the effect of petroleum hydrocarbon presence on ion exchange characteristics and the performance of the barrier; (viii) determination of the effect of biofilm growth on ion exchange characteristics and the performance of the barrier (ix) to what extent and how to manipulate ionic strength and composition of ions in solution to achieve optimal release of nutrients for the metabolism of petroleum hydrocarbons by indigenous Antarctic microorganisms; and (x) test and validate the performance of the barrier media under field conditions.
author2 STEVENS, GEOFFREY (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
STEVENS, GEOFFREY (processor)
MUMFORD, KATHRYN ANNE (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title Development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - Permeable Reactive Barrier Data
title_short Development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - Permeable Reactive Barrier Data
title_full Development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - Permeable Reactive Barrier Data
title_fullStr Development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - Permeable Reactive Barrier Data
title_full_unstemmed Development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - Permeable Reactive Barrier Data
title_sort development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - permeable reactive barrier data
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.edu.au/development-application-technologies-reactive-barrier/699662
https://doi.org/10.4225/15/55669BCF5AF2A
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1300_PRB
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-66.2817; southlimit=-66.2818; westlimit=110.5254; eastLimit=110.5255; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 2005-01-01 to 2009-01-19
long_lat ENVELOPE(110.528,110.528,-66.282,-66.282)
ENVELOPE(110.5254,110.5255,-66.2817,-66.2818)
geographic Antarctic
Casey Station
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Casey Station
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.edu.au/development-application-technologies-reactive-barrier/699662
bafe6ab0-9ee2-4d2c-a4a7-57a9203c5603
doi:10.4225/15/55669BCF5AF2A
ASAC_1300_PRB
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1300_PRB
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4225/15/55669BCF5AF2A
_version_ 1766261961593454592
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699662 2023-05-15T13:55:21+02:00 Development and application of technologies for the removal of heavy-metal contaminants from run-off associated with abandoned waste disposal sites - Permeable Reactive Barrier Data STEVENS, GEOFFREY (hasPrincipalInvestigator) STEVENS, GEOFFREY (processor) MUMFORD, KATHRYN ANNE (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-66.2817; southlimit=-66.2818; westlimit=110.5254; eastLimit=110.5255; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 2005-01-01 to 2009-01-19 https://researchdata.edu.au/development-application-technologies-reactive-barrier/699662 https://doi.org/10.4225/15/55669BCF5AF2A https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1300_PRB http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.edu.au/development-application-technologies-reactive-barrier/699662 bafe6ab0-9ee2-4d2c-a4a7-57a9203c5603 doi:10.4225/15/55669BCF5AF2A ASAC_1300_PRB https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1300_PRB http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre environment geoscientificInformation inlandWaters CONTAMINANT LEVELS/SPILLS EARTH SCIENCE HUMAN DIMENSIONS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS WATER MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE/MANAGEMENT CONTAMINANTS TERRESTRIAL HYDROSPHERE WATER QUALITY/WATER CHEMISTRY PETROLEUM SOLID EARTH EARTH GASES/LIQUIDS PRB Permeable Reactive Barrier Fuel FIELD INVESTIGATION CONTINENT &gt ANTARCTICA &gt Casey Station Area GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR dataset ftands https://doi.org/10.4225/15/55669BCF5AF2A 2021-07-05T22:21:06Z The contamination of soils by heavy metals is a problem that faces communities the world over. Contamination is of particular concern when it is mobilised into ground and surface waters, where it can migrate into rivers, lakes and the marine environment. Clean up of contaminated sites can exacerbate water pollution by enabling previously immobilised heavy metals to be exposed to water sources. The development of adsorption technologies and permeable reactive barriers to remove mobilised pollutants from ground and surface waters, will prevent the spread of contamination from contaminated sites. The objectives of this research are to develop technology for the containment and treatment of metal contaminated waters at contaminated sites in Antarctica. In this proposal we intend to develop the use of permeable reactive barrier (PRB) technologies for the in situ containment of metal contaminants dispersed from abandoned waste disposal sites, such as at Wilkes and Davis. The scientific findings of this proposal in the years 2003 -2008 indicate that the general principle of cold regions PRB's are sound, but the performance of off the shelf granular media, such as zeolites, are adversely affected by low temperature and freezing. These factors reduce the capacity and kinetics of metal uptake. Zeolites are also limited to the adsorption of metal cations and for example do not adsorb oxy metal anions such as arsenic, chromium etc, which also occur in these areas. Therefore before this technology is applied in Antarctica, modification or development of new material that is robust and predictable in its performance and able to stabilise a broader range of materials in freezing environments is required. Thus the scientific aims of this proposal are 1. To develop PRB materials applicable for deployment in the Antarctic environment 2. To develop predictive models for predicting the performance of the PRBs A permeable reactive barrier (PRB) was built and installed in way of a fuel spill located at the Casey Station Main Power House (MPH). This PRB consisted of five cages and was filled with different materials designed to bind and degrade fuel. Each cage had eight multi-ports (MP) throughout its length from which water samples were extracted at different depths, and alongside material samples collected i.e. cage 1 - MP1 to MP 8, Cage 2 - MP9 to MP16. This spreadsheet contains analytical results from 2005 to 2009. Following are some explanations of the spreadsheets available as part of the download file: 1) PRB Samples - a summary of information i.e. Sample Tracking Database Barcode, label given by sampler, sample type. 2) Nutrients - Water extractable and Potassium Chloride extractable ion concentrations in the PRB material samples given on a dry matter basis (mg/kg). 3) Samples soil only - a summary of samples of material taken from the PRB 4) TPH and total P - Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (from C9 to C28) and Total Phosphorous concentrations in the PRB material samples given in a dry matter basis (mg/kg) 5) Water Samples - ion concentrations in water samples taken from the barrier from water samples (barcodes link to the summary information) 6) Total P - Total Phosphorous 7) Waters TPH - Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons Total P - Total Phosphorous DMB - Dry Matter Basis DMF - Dry Matter Fraction Co-ordinates for the four corners of the lower PRB in lat long: 110 31' 31.672" E 66 16' 54.151" S 110 31' 31.816" E 66 16' 54.129" S 110 31' 32.044" E 66 16' 54.266" S 110 31' 31.903" E 66 16' 54.303" S All samples were collected within one square metre of these locations. This work was also associated with ASAC project 2570 (ASAC_2570) - Constraints on hydrocarbon adsorption and nutrient release from zeolites at low temperatures for hydrocarbon remediation in Antarctica. Project 2570 had the following objectives: Project objectives: The objectives of this research are to further develop low temperature technologies for the containment and remediation of hydrocarbon contaminated waters at contaminated sites in Antarctica. This process requires the examination and development of a number of materials for use in permeable (bio-) reactive barriers and landfarming trials. This process includes; (i) quantification of the nutrient holding capacities of a number of controlled release nutrient products (CRNs); (ii) determination of binary and multi-component exchange equilibria of exchangeable cations with nutrients loaded onto exchange material at low temperatures; (iii) modelling of exchange equilibria using a novel two parameter temperature dependent semi-empirical thermodynamic model; (iv) undertaking dynamic studies and modelling involving exchange material; (v) quantification of adsorption characteristics of Special Antarctic Blend diesel (SAB) emulsions onto barrier media at low temperatures; (vi) the development and understanding of superior hydrocarbon adsorption materials including covalently bonded surfactant modified zeolites and chitson coated sand (vii) determining the effect of petroleum hydrocarbon presence on ion exchange characteristics and the performance of the barrier; (viii) determination of the effect of biofilm growth on ion exchange characteristics and the performance of the barrier (ix) to what extent and how to manipulate ionic strength and composition of ions in solution to achieve optimal release of nutrients for the metabolism of petroleum hydrocarbons by indigenous Antarctic microorganisms; and (x) test and validate the performance of the barrier media under field conditions. Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Casey Station ENVELOPE(110.528,110.528,-66.282,-66.282) The Antarctic ENVELOPE(110.5254,110.5255,-66.2817,-66.2818)