April 12, 2024
Journal Article
Spectral induced polarization signatures of smoldering remediation enhanced with colloidal activated carbon: An experimental study
Abstract
Monitoring the remediation of soil and groundwater contaminated by organic compounds remains highly challenging. The spectral induced polarization (SIP) method exhibits significant promise for monitoring changes to the electrical properties of soils that are undergoing remediation. Thermal treatments, such as smoldering combustion, have become established remediation techniques for destroying contaminants. Smoldering combustion is now being supported by colloidal activated carbon (CAC), with CAC able to adsorb contaminants and supplement the fuel source for destroying contaminants. The objective of this study is to investigate the potential of SIP for tracking the smoldering remediation of imitated field soils supplemented with CAC. SIP column experiments were first conducted to assess the response of SIP to varying concentrations of CAC in field soils that contain, or do not contain, organic material (OM). These results demonstrate that increasing OM and CAC contents increase both the real and imaginary components of the complex conductivity, with the imaginary conductivity also showing frequency dependence. Next, a suite of smoldering and SIP column experiments was conducted to investigate if SIP can detect changes in imitated field soils of varying OM and CAC contents that have been remediated by smoldering combustion. The SIP results on the examined soils both before and after smoldering show that SIP can detect changes in the real conductivity, and particularly the imaginary conductivity, between different soil compositions and different stages of the remediation process. High resolution scanning electron microscopy (SEM) imaging was performed on all samples to validate the SIP and smoldering experiments, confirming significant reductions in carbon after smoldering. Overall, this study suggests that SIP has potential to detect changes in the electrical properties of field soils due to the addition of remedial fluids like CAC and contaminant destruction by smoldering remediation.Published: April 12, 2024