1. Hydrocarbon exclusion from ground water during freezing
- Author
-
Tumeo, Mark A. and Davidson, Bret
- Subjects
Environmental engineering -- Research ,Water, Underground -- Research ,Hydrocarbons -- Environmental aspects ,Soil pollution -- Research ,Engineering and manufacturing industries ,Environmental issues - Abstract
Bench-scale studies were conducted using a constant-head groundwater flow chamber and natural soil. Initial experiments with chlorides and dye were conducted to test the hydraulic and adsorptive characteristics of the chamber. A constant flow of phenol was then introduced into the chamber and contaminant movement with time was monitored under freezing and nonfreezing conditions. The chamber was located in a controlled-temperature room, and freezing fronts were induced from the soil surface downward using cooled Freon circulated through freezer pads placed on the surface of the soil. The results conclusively demonstrate that phenol is excluded from the freezing front and pushed downward through the system. Extensive exclusion of the chemical occurs even though the freezing point of phenol (43 degrees C) is significantly higher than water. The information gained through this research is applicable in cold regions outside Alaska and the Arctic where ground water systems may undergo periodic freezing, and may also be of extreme importance in artificial-freezing scenarios such as those currently being investigated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as a method of contaminant containment.
- Published
- 1993