Removal and Re-use of Tar-contaminated Sediment by Freeze-dredging at a Coking Plant Luleå, Sweden

Submerged tar-contaminated sediments are generally very loose, which makes remediation challenging. We tested if a modified version of freeze-dredging could be used to remove and dewater such sediments in a canal down-stream a coking plant. PVC hoses carrying a heat medium were placed horizontally i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Water Environment Research
Main Authors: Rostmark, Susanne C., Colombo, Manuel, Knutsson, Sven, Öberg, Gunilla
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Luleå tekniska universitet, Geoteknologi 2016
Subjects:
tar
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-15455
https://doi.org/10.2175/106143015X14362865226950
Description
Summary:Submerged tar-contaminated sediments are generally very loose, which makes remediation challenging. We tested if a modified version of freeze-dredging could be used to remove and dewater such sediments in a canal down-stream a coking plant. PVC hoses carrying a heat medium were placed horizontally in the submerged sediments. Five days of freezing allowed straightforward removal of most of the sediments. Flat freeze cells were placed side by side in the canal to remove the rest. The freeze-thaw process increased the dry substance (DS) content from approximately 50 to 80%. Outdoors storage under rainy conditions did not re-wet the dried sediments. The material was successfully used as feed-stock in the coking plant, with the double cost-benefit of avoided transportation to deposit and reduced use of coal. The study demonstrates that freeze-dredging can facilitate removal, storage and beneficial re-use of submerged tar-contaminated sediments. Validerad; 2016; Nivå 2; 2016-10-10 (andbra)