Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6386514 Journal of Contaminant Hydrology 2014 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Long-term pump-and-treat data were used to examine mass-removal behavior for five sites.•Asymptotic behavior was observed to some degree for all sites.•Differences in observed behavior correlated to specific site conditions.•Observed plume persistence was attributed to back diffusion, potential uncontrolled sources, and well-field hydraulics.

Historical groundwater-withdrawal and contaminant-concentration data collected from long-term pump-and-treat operations were analyzed and used to examine contaminant mass discharge (CMD) and mass-removal behavior for multiple sites. Differences in behavior were observed, and these differences were consistent with the nature of contaminant distributions and subsurface properties of the sites. For example, while CMD exhibited a relatively rapid decline during the initial stage of operation for all three sites, the rate of decline varied. The greatest rate was observed for the PGN site, whereas the lowest rate was observed for the MOT site. In addition, the MOT site exhibited the lowest relative reduction in CMD. These results are consistent with the actuality that the MOT site likely contains the greatest proportion of poorly accessible contaminant mass, given that it comprises a combined alluvium and fractured-bedrock system in which solvent and dissolved mass are present directly in the bedrock. The relative contributions of the source zones versus the plumes to total CMD were determined. Constrained contaminant mass removal was observed to influence the plumes for all three sites, and was attributed to a combination of uncontrolled (or imperfectly controlled) sources, back diffusion, and well-field hydraulics. The results presented herein illustrate that detailed analysis of operational pump-and-treat data can be a cost-effective method for providing value-added characterization of contaminated sites.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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