In the framework of the research project AQUAREHAB (FP7 - G. A. Nr. 226565), a pilot injection test of guar gum stabilized microsized zerovalent iron has been designed and performed under low pressure in a CAHs contaminated site in Belgium, characterized by fine sand (hydraulic conductivity in the order of 2•10-5 m/s) and an effective velocity equal to 0.005 m/day (1). The field application was aimed to overcome those critical aspects which hinder mZVI particles field injection, mainly due to ZVI-based colloidal suspensions instability. A shear thinning guar gum solution (2 g/l) was selected as an environmentally friendly stabilizer. The relevant properties of the iron slurry (iron particles size and concentration, polymeric stabilizer type and concentration, slurry viscosity) were designed in the laboratory based on several tests (namely iron reactivity tests towards contaminants, sedimentation tests and rheological measurements).The slurry preparation was successfully up-scaled to the field application, allowing a fast preparation of large volumes (1 m3 at a time) of slurry with good dissolution of guar gum and effective dispersion of mZVI. Since the injection regime of iron slurries depends on subsurface geotechnical parameters, aquifer hydraulic conductivity, and fluid properties, a specific injection well and monitoring strategy have been developed in order to achieve high discharge rates and radii of influence, and a more homogeneous distribution of the iron particles through low pressure injection. The injection well has been designed and sealed in order to sustain average to high discharge rates, preventing the daylighting of the product. Moreover the well has been hydraulically tested by means of innovative water and guar gum step rate tests in order to determine the most suitable injection rate for the iron slurry. The injection of 50 kg of microsized iron particles (BASF, Germany), dispersed in 5 m3 of a 2 g/l guar gum suspension, was performed at a discharge rate of 1.5 m3/h. The monitoring of the process has been conducted measuring injection rate and pressure as well as iron concentration by means of a magnetic susceptometer. After the injection, the iron distribution in the subsurface was determined through liners extraction and the iron concentration measured both via non-invasive magnetic susceptibility measurements and chemical analysis. Even if the field test was specifically designed to inject in a permeation regime, or on the threshold between permeation and fracturing, the results of monitoring injection pressure and iron distribution proved that particles migration in the porous medium occurred via preferential flow. Results will be presented as well as considerations about critical aspects related to injection via permeation.
Field injection of microscale zerovalent iron for groundwater remediation / Sethi, Rajandrea; Tosco, TIZIANA ANNA ELISABETTA; Luna, Michela; Gastone, Francesca; Velimirovic, M.; Gemoets, J.; Muyshond, R.; Sapion, H.; Klaas, N.; Bastiaens, L.. - ELETTRONICO. - 16:(2014). (Intervento presentato al convegno EGU General assembly 2014 tenutosi a Vienna, Austria nel 27 April - 2 May 2014).
Field injection of microscale zerovalent iron for groundwater remediation
SETHI, RAJANDREA;TOSCO, TIZIANA ANNA ELISABETTA;LUNA, MICHELA;GASTONE, FRANCESCA;
2014
Abstract
In the framework of the research project AQUAREHAB (FP7 - G. A. Nr. 226565), a pilot injection test of guar gum stabilized microsized zerovalent iron has been designed and performed under low pressure in a CAHs contaminated site in Belgium, characterized by fine sand (hydraulic conductivity in the order of 2•10-5 m/s) and an effective velocity equal to 0.005 m/day (1). The field application was aimed to overcome those critical aspects which hinder mZVI particles field injection, mainly due to ZVI-based colloidal suspensions instability. A shear thinning guar gum solution (2 g/l) was selected as an environmentally friendly stabilizer. The relevant properties of the iron slurry (iron particles size and concentration, polymeric stabilizer type and concentration, slurry viscosity) were designed in the laboratory based on several tests (namely iron reactivity tests towards contaminants, sedimentation tests and rheological measurements).The slurry preparation was successfully up-scaled to the field application, allowing a fast preparation of large volumes (1 m3 at a time) of slurry with good dissolution of guar gum and effective dispersion of mZVI. Since the injection regime of iron slurries depends on subsurface geotechnical parameters, aquifer hydraulic conductivity, and fluid properties, a specific injection well and monitoring strategy have been developed in order to achieve high discharge rates and radii of influence, and a more homogeneous distribution of the iron particles through low pressure injection. The injection well has been designed and sealed in order to sustain average to high discharge rates, preventing the daylighting of the product. Moreover the well has been hydraulically tested by means of innovative water and guar gum step rate tests in order to determine the most suitable injection rate for the iron slurry. The injection of 50 kg of microsized iron particles (BASF, Germany), dispersed in 5 m3 of a 2 g/l guar gum suspension, was performed at a discharge rate of 1.5 m3/h. The monitoring of the process has been conducted measuring injection rate and pressure as well as iron concentration by means of a magnetic susceptometer. After the injection, the iron distribution in the subsurface was determined through liners extraction and the iron concentration measured both via non-invasive magnetic susceptibility measurements and chemical analysis. Even if the field test was specifically designed to inject in a permeation regime, or on the threshold between permeation and fracturing, the results of monitoring injection pressure and iron distribution proved that particles migration in the porous medium occurred via preferential flow. Results will be presented as well as considerations about critical aspects related to injection via permeation.Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2579139
Attenzione
Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo