Advantages Of Density-Driven Convection
Over Pump & Treat
In-well stripping is frequently compared to pump-and-treat
systems because both involve pumping the contaminated groundwater
through a treatment step and because pump-and-treat systems
often use air stripping-based treatment. The two technologies
are actually more different than similar.
In-situ versus ex-situ.
DDC is an in-situ treatment process
that does not involve pumping the groundwater to the
surface. Pump-and-treat is an ex-situ treatment process.
Water Discharge Problems.
Because DDC does not involve
pumping groundwater to the surface, there is no treated
water to
release. Pump-and-treat systems create a large volume
of water that must be released, typically through an NPDES
permit or to a municipal treatment plant. Such releases
must
be
monitored, with periodic reporting. In some settings,
it would not be possible to release the water, often because
the local streams or the treatment plant could not handle
the increased flows. A polishing step, often with aqueous
phase carbon, is sometimes required after stripping to
meet the discharge requirements. Release is especially
problematic
if there are other contaminants or natural components
of the groundwater (e.g., salt, radioactive constituents)
that
could not be released, either to streams or to a treatment
plant. It is often desirable to remove volatile contaminants
through in-well stripping and leave the groundwater with
all of its other constituents in the aquifer.
Point of Stripping.
DDC accomplishes the stripping within
the well and then releases the stripped water to the
aquifer to recirculate and bring more contaminants back to
the
treatment well.
Pump-and-treat systems accomplish the stripping step (or
other treatment step) outside the well, usually in an aboveground
treatment system specially designed for the site. For volatile
compounds, the initial treatment step often is air stripping
in a stripping tower or tray stripper. To avoid damage
during the winter, the above-ground treatment system must
be protected
from freezing.
Pumping and groundwater circulation.
DDC pumps water through
the well, drawing water from one level of the aquifer,
treating it, and releasing it to another level of the same
aquifer.
Because the water moves vertically as well as horizontally
through the aquifer, under the influence of strong vertical
gradients induced by the draw down and mounding created
by the pumping and release, the water moves outward from
the
well and then back in a torroidal circulation pattern.
The torroidal treatment zone has a radius of influence
that is
similar to pump-and-treat capture zones. The radius of
influence has to be determined for each site, but often
is 2 to 5 times
the distance between the inlet screen and the outlet
screen. For a 50-foot depth of contamination, well spacings
of
300 to 500 feet are theoretically possible, though more
conservative designs (200+ feet) are typically used.
Pump-and-treat systems remove the water from the aquifer
by drawing it into a pumped well and conveying it to the
surface. Extraction preferentially removes water from those
layers and zones of the aquifer that yield water most readily,
the higher conductivity zones. Yet the higher conductivity
zones are often the least contaminated. Removing water
from the lower-flow, more stagnant zones of the aquifer would
be preferable, once the permeable pathways have been cleaned,
but there is no way to redirect flows. Pump-and-treat systems,
in effect, preferentially remove water from the least contaminated
zones of an aquifer and continue to do so even after those
zones have been cleaned.
More vigorous remediation.
DDC circulates water through
all zones of the aquifer by inducing vertical gradients
and flows
over a large treatment area.
By removing water from one level of the aquifer and releasing
it to another level of the same aquifer through a recharge
screen, in-well stripping induces vertical gradients and
flows. The vertical gradients induce flows through the
more stagnant parts of the aquifer and flush contaminants
to higher
flow zones. By pushing water through the more stagnant
zones of the aquifer, DDC does not rely on diffusion to move
trapped
contaminants. Convection moves contaminants faster than
diffusion, often orders of magnitude faster.
Pump-and-treat approaches rely primarily on diffusion to
remove contaminants from the more stagnant zones in the
aquifer. While diffusion eventually will move the contaminants
to
the higher conductivity zones, where pumping can remove
them, diffusion processes are very slow when compared to
convective
flow processes. While waiting on diffusion, it is necessary
to pump and treat enormous quantities of water over many
years. This problem is exacerbated for contaminated lower
conductivity zones that are relatively thick.
Faster.
Pump-and-treat and DDC operate on different principles:
pump-and-treat passively draws to its extraction wells
whatever water will flow most easily under the horizontal
gradients
induced by the pumping, and relies on diffusion to remove
contaminants from lower permeability zones; while DDC,
through strong vertical gradients, vigorously circulates
and treats
all of the water within the treatment zone. Because DDC
operates on this different principle, it can be relatively
quicker
in remediating a site. At a site in Wichita, Kansas,
cleanup to the remediation goal was achieved in most of the
DDC
wells in less than one year.
Cheaper.
DDC systems are built using standard, off-the-shelf
well components. Capital expenditures for above-ground
equipment are slightly less than pump-and-treat,
since no stripping
tower is necessary. In-well stripping avoids the
need for an NPDES permit or discharge to a treatment plant
and the
attendant monitoring and reporting costs.
During its life cycle, any remediation system requires
oversight, monitoring, maintenance, and periodic reporting.
With life
cycles extending to decades, pump-and-treat approaches
incur large costs for continuing these efforts throughout
a remediation.
Thus, Density-Driven Convection technology is less expensive
to install, cheaper to operate each month, and completes
the remediation in a fraction of the time. All of this
adds up to much lower costs than pump-and-treat.
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