The term non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) refers to a group of organic compounds with scarce solubility in water. They are the products of various human activities and may be accidentally introduced into the soil system. Given their toxicity level and high mobility, NAPLs constitute a serious geo-environmental problem. Contaminant distribution in the soil and groundwater contains fundamental information for the remediation of polluted
soil sites. The present research explored the possible employment of time
domain reflectometry (TDR) to estimate pollutant removal in a silt-loam soil that was primarily contaminated with a corn oil as a light NAPL and then flushed with different washing solutions. Known mixtures of soil and NAPL were prepared in the laboratory to achieve soil specimens with varying
pollution levels. The prepared soil samples were repacked into plastic
cylinders and then placed in testing cells. Washing solutions were then
injected upward into the contaminated sample, and both the quantity of
remediated NAPL and the bulk dielectric permittivity of the soil sample were
determined. The above data were also used to calibrate and validate a
dielectric model (the α mixing model) which permits the volumetric
NAPL content (θNAPL; m3 m-3) within the contaminated sample to be determined and quantified during the different decontamination stages. Our results demonstrate that during a decontamination process, the TDR device is NAPL-sensitive: the dielectric permittivity of the medium increases as the NAPL volume decreases. Moreover, decontamination progression can be monitored using a simple (one-parameter) mixing model.
Introduction
Soil and groundwater contamination with non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) from point or nonpoint sources
is a severe problem of considerable complexity (Fitts, 2002; Fetter, 1993).
The repercussions concern not only the deterioration of the soil's physical,
mechanical and chemical properties but also account for a potentially
severe hazard to the well-being of humans and other living species (Freeze,
2000).
Soil flushing is the technical procedure used for treating polluted soils
with water, surfactants and co-solvents (such as methanol, ethanol and
propanols). Surfactant-enhanced flushing was developed from the conventional
pump-and-treat method. The success of this approach is related to the
capacity of such chemical compounds to greatly enhance the aqueous
solubility of oils (Pennell et al., 1994; Parnian and Ayatollahi, 2008).
There is high interfacial tension between NAPL and water molecules that
makes water a non-efficient cleaning material in removing NAPL from the
soil. Instead, surfactants and co-solvent agents can promote the enhanced
removal of NAPL from the subsurface through mobilization and solubilization
(Martel et al., 1998; Rinaldi and Francisca, 2006; Parnian and Ayatollahi,
2008).
Primary remediation entails the removal of the NAPL free phase by pumping.
This extraction mechanism returns appreciable effects if there is a region
of high NAPL saturation. After primary pumping, a considerable portion of
NAPL remains constrained within the soil as capillary forces overcome
viscous and buoyancy forces. This discontinuous NAPL phase is referred to as
trapped residual NAPL (or NAPL residual saturation), and its remediation is
referred to as secondary remediation (Parnian and Ayatollahi, 2008).
Residual NAPL is a long-term source of soil and groundwater pollution
(Mercer and Cohen, 1990; Troung Hong and Bettahar, 2000).
To develop powerful decontamination procedures, the characterization of
polluted soils is required. Practices usually employed to characterize
polluted soil sites are coring, soil sampling and the installation of
monitoring wells for the collection of water samples from aquifers (Mercer
and Cohen, 1990). Since the above procedures are costly, different
dielectric techniques can be used to detect organic contaminants in soils.
The most widely accepted geophysical technique, based on the principle of
electromagnetic wave (EMW) propagation, is the ground-penetrating radar (GPR;
Knight, 2001). Redman et al. (1991) described some field experiments in the
application of GPR to detect NAPL plumes.
Rinaldi and Francisca (2006) used a coaxial impedance dielectric
reflectometry (CIDR) technique to measure the complex dielectric
permittivity in sands contaminated by a paraffin oil. Their research into
the dielectric behavior of NAPL-contaminated soils during a decontamination
process mainly focused on the removal efficiency of different washing
solutions and on the spectral response of the contaminated medium during
the various tests conducted.
Time domain reflectometry (TDR) is a further geophysical device based on electromagnetic wave (EMW)
principles that can also be used for this purpose (Endres and Redman,
1993; Redman and DeRyck, 1994; Mohamed and Said, 2005; Moroizumi and
Sasaki, 2006; Francisca and Montoro, 2012). Few experiments have been
conducted coupling the TDR technique and NAPL. In these studies estimation
of NAPLs using TDR measurements of dielectric properties relies greatly on
various mixing models relating the measured dielectric permittivity to the
volume fractions of the pore fluids and various soil phases such as solid,
water, air and NAPLs (van Dam et al., 2005).
Some interesting results were achieved by Persson and Berndtsson (2002)
whilst investigating the influence of different LNAPLs (i.e., light NAPLs) on TDR measurements
in a homogeneous silica sand under saturated and unsaturated soil
conditions. Measurements of both dielectric permittivity and electrical
conductivity allowed a method to be developed (the two-step method) which
measured the dielectric properties of the system against the amount of NAPL
in soils. Comegna et al. (2016) developed a general TDR-based methodology
for evaluating the correlations between the dielectric response and the NAPL
content in variable saturated soils with different textures and pedological
characteristics.
The purpose of this study was as follows: (i) to investigate a possible
extension of TDR technology to assess the effects of NAPL removal in soils
and (ii) revisit, on the basis of the acquired data and the experimental
results, a dielectric model to predict, “in real time”, the volumetric amounts of NAPL (θNAPL) within the contaminated soil during the decontamination process.
Theoretical concepts of TDR
TDR is a geophysical technique employed to determine the dielectric
permittivity of liquids and solids (Ferrè and Topp, 2002, described this
method in detail). In general, the bulk dielectric permittivity is a complex
term (εr*), which may be expressed as follows (Robinson et al., 2003):
εr*=εr′-jεr′′+σωε0,
where εr′ is the real part of dielectric permittivity, which gives the energy stored in the dielectrics at a certain frequency and
temperature, and εr′′ is the imaginary part due to
relaxations. The zero-frequency conductivity σ, the angle frequency ω, the imaginary number j=-1 and the permittivity ε0 in free space contribute to defining εr*.
When the frequency of a TDR cable tester ranges between 200 MHz and 1.5 GHz,
dielectric losses can be considered minimal (Heimovaara, 1994), and the bulk
dielectric permittivity εb (≅ the real part of
permittivity) of a probe of length L is determined from the propagation
velocity v(=2L/t) of an electromagnetic wave along the wave guide across the investigated medium by the following expression:
εb=cv2,
where c(=3×108 m s-1) is the velocity of an electromagnetic
wave in vacuum (Topp et al., 1980) and t is travel time, i.e., the time
required by the generated signal to go back and forth through the TDR probe
of length L (m). This can be calculated as follows:
t=2Lcεb.
The direct dependence of the signal's travel time t on soil dielectric
permittivity is expressed by Eq. (3).
Estimating volumetric NAPL content during a decontamination process in soils
Dielectric mixing models, in their classical application, have been proposed
to estimate the bulk dielectric permittivity of a multi-phase medium, that
is, a combination of three or four dielectric phases, and to couple the
dielectric permittivity of the medium to the dielectric permittivity of each
single phase (Hilhorst, 1998). Recently, after analyzing the effects of
organic contaminants on soil dielectric properties, the above models were
further developed to estimate the dielectric properties of NAPL-polluted
soils (Redman et al., 1991; Persson and Berndtsson, 2002; Francisca and
Montoro, 2012; Comegna et al., 2013a, 2016, 2017).
Based on such models, in the present study, we analyze the possibility of
predicting the correlations between the volumetric contents of
NAPL (θNAPL) and the dielectric response (εb) of contaminated soil during the progression of a steady-state remediation process.
In the present research, we chose the so-called α model (Birchack et
al., 1974; Knight and Endres, 1990; Roth et al., 1990):
εb=∑i=1nViεiα1/α,
where Vi is the volume and εi is the permittivity of
each component of the complex medium; the exponent α is a fitting
parameter (α varies between -1 and 1), which may be related to the
internal structure of the investigated medium (Hilhorst, 1998; Coppola et
al., 2013, 2015). Under the following hypothesis, (i) the soil is homogeneous from a textural point of view, and (ii) when the soil porosity (ϕ) is constant, Eq. (4) was reformulated for our purposes.
For mixtures of soil (s) saturated with a certain amount of washing solution (ws), in rearranging the model formulation of Rinaldi and Francisca (2006), the α model yields the following:
εs-wsα=(1-ϕ)εsα+ϕεwsα,
where εs-ws is the soil-washing solution permittivity, and εs and εws are the permittivities of soil particles and washing solutions, respectively. By the same token, for soil organic (s-NAPL) compounds at saturation, the α model can be expressed as follows:
εs-NAPLα=(1-ϕ)εsα+ϕεNAPLα,
where εs-NAPL is the permittivity of the soil–NAPL mixture, and εNAPL is the oil permittivity.
A medium consisting of soil particles, washing solution and NAPL (s-ws-NAPL) can be viewed as a mix of soil-washing solution (Eq. 5) and soil–NAPL (Eq. 6):
εs-ws-NAPLα=βεs-NAPLα+(1-β)εs-wsα,
where β is the relative volume of NAPL contained in the whole fluid
phase,
β=θNAPLθws+θNAPL=θNAPLθf,
where θf is the volumetric fluid content (m3 m-3), the sum of the volumetric washing solution content (θws) and volumetric NAPL
content (θNAPL); β varies between 0 (i.e., a soil-washing solution mixture) and 1 (i.e., a soil–NAPL mixture).
To estimate θNAPL, Eq. (7) is first reformulated in terms of β:
β=εs-wsα-εs-ws-NAPLαεs-wsα-εs-NAPLα=(1-ϕ)εsα+ϕεwsα-εs-ws-NAPLα(1-ϕ)εsα+ϕεwsα-(1-ϕ)εsα+ϕεNAPLα.
Substituting Eq. (8) into Eq. (9), and considering that for a saturated medium, the volumetric fluid content is equal to soil porosity
(i.e., θf=ϕ), θNAPL can be calculated as follows:
θNAPL=(1-ϕ)εsα+ϕεwsα-εs-ws-NAPLαεwsα-εNAPLα.
Equation (10) correlates the dependence of volumetric NAPL content with soil
porosity; θNAPL can be estimated (within the contaminated soil) during the progression of a remediation process once the dielectric
permittivity of the soil-contaminated mixture (εs-ws-NAPL)
is known.
Materials and methodsSoil and fluid properties
A silt-loam anthrosol (IUSS Working Group WRB, 2006) from the region of
Puglia (Italy) was used for this study. The soil texture was measured by
means of the hydrometer method (Day, 1965), while the Walkley–Black
procedure (Allison, 1965) was used to determine soil organic C content. The
method developed by Miller and Curtis (2006) was used to measure soil
electrical conductivity (ECw), while soil pH was determined on the basis of a 1:1 soil-to-water ratio (Eckert, 1988). In textural terms, the soil comprised 15.7 % sand, 11.6 % clay and 72.4 % silt. Soil porosity was 0.57 %, organic content was 1.84 %, ECw was 0.17 dS m-1 and soil pH was 8.40.
The NAPL employed for the laboratory tests was corn oil (εNAPL=3.2; ECNAPL=0.055 dS m-1 at 25 ∘C) with a density of 0.905 g cm-3 (at 25 ∘C). Three different removal solutions were employed for soil cleaning: (a) a first solution (referred to below as wd) composed of 99 % distilled water and 1 % commercial detergent (εd=9.22, at 25 ∘C); (b) a second solution (wda no. 1) composed of 90 % distilled water, 1 % commercial detergent and 9 % methanol as co-solvent (εalcohol=26.13, at 25 ∘C); and (c) a third solution (wda no. 2) composed of distilled water (85 %) with commercial detergent (1 %) and methanol (14 %). The dielectric permittivity of the washing solutions, measured at 25 ∘C, was εwd=75.04, εwdano.1=68.98 and
εwdano.2=65.92, whereas the dielectric permittivity of
the tested soil saturated with each of the three cleaning solutions was
εsoil+wd=34.59, εsoil+wdano.1=31.04 and εsoil+wdano.2=30.10.
Experimental setup used in the NAPL removal experiments (from
Comegna et al., 2013c).
Measurement of dielectric permittivity of soil–NAPL-contaminated samples during soil remediationExperimental setup
As illustrated in Fig. 1, the experimental layout consisted of the
following: (i) a Tektronix (model 1502C) cable tester, (ii) a three-rod probe, 14.5 cm long, with a wire diameter of 0.003 m and a wire spacing of 0.02 m, introduced vertically into the soil samples, (iii) a testing cell, 0.15 m high and 0.08 m in diameter, and (iv) a peristaltic pump used for upward movement of the washing solution.
Sample preparation and testing procedures
Soil was oven dried at 105 ∘C and passed through a 2 mm sieve.
Known amounts of soil and oil were mixed together, shaken, and then kept for
24 h in sealed plastic bags to avoid any evaporation and ensure a uniform distribution of oil within the sample and good oil adsorption by the soil matrix. The samples were then allocated to cylindrical boxes. With a view to achieving different degrees of (initial) soil contamination, volumetric NAPL content (θNAPL) was varied from 0.05 to 0.40 (in steps of 0.05). In all, each washing solution comprised eight oil-contaminated soil samples.
For all experiments, the soil samples were placed in the vessels in various
steps at a bulk density of 1.13 g cm-3. During TDR measurements, the
soil samples were conserved at a temperature of 25 ∘C by using a
thermostat box. Remediation was performed using an upward flux of diverse
pore volumes T of three washing solutions (wd, wda no. 1 and wda no. 2) supplied at the rate of 90 cm3 h-1, corresponding to a Darcian velocity of
1.8 cm h-1. After collection of the outflow from the soil columns, the
surnatant NAPL was separated from the washing solution and the quantity of
NAPL remediated from the soil was determined.
The obtained data series were employed to calibrate the proposed dielectric
model of Eq. (10). An independent dataset, obtained in the same manner as the calibration dataset, was used for model validation.
Numerical indices for model performance evaluation
The goodness of Eq. (10) was evaluated using two different criteria: (i) the mean bias error (MBE) and (ii) the model efficiency (EF), computed according
to the following relations (Legates and McCabe Jr., 1999):
11MBE=∑i=1NEi-OiN,12EF=1-∑i=1NEi-Oi2∑i=1NOi-O‾2,
where Ei and Oi are respectively the expected and the observed
value, O‾ is the mean of the observed data, and N is the number
of observations.
Selection of experimental relationships between the measured dielectric permittivity (εs-ws-NAPL) and number of pore volumes T under the effect of different washing solutions: (i) water–detergent (wd) and (ii) water–detergent–alcohol (wda no. 1 and wda no. 2).
MBE measures the differences between model-simulated data and measured values
(positive MBE values are used to indicate average overprediction, while negative values indicate underprediction). The model's ability to forecast θNAPL is described by parameter EF, according to which EF = 1 indicates perfect accord between predicted and measured data.
Volume of NAPL recovered (VNAPL-Rem) with respect to the initial volume of NAPL present in the soil sample (V0) of different washing solutions (wd, wda no. 1 and wda no. 2) for different experiments (θNAPL=0.15, 0.20, 0.25, 0.30, 0.35 and 0.40).
Results and discussionInfluence of washing solution on NAPL removal
Figure 2a–f, with reference to the most representative
experimental results, reveal the influence of pore volumes T on evaluated
bulk dielectric permittivity (εs-ws-NAPL) for the soil specimens initially polluted with oil. As the washing solution started to remove oil, the dielectric permittivity rose due to the larger dielectric
permittivity of the flushing mixture. As the remediation solution continued
to move upward, the rising rate of the dielectric permittivity decreased and
asymptotically approached a constant value. This steady value was smaller
than that observed when the soil specimens were completely saturated by only
the flushing solution (i.e., wd, wda no. 1 or wda no. 2), which in our tests
corresponds to the condition of a completely decontaminated soil. This
difference in values is undoubtedly due to oil confined in soil pores (i.e., NAPL residual saturation). For the same reason, residual saturation may
explain why insignificant oil remediation was observed for
θNAPL values less than 0.15. This aspect may be explained by the fact that for low volumetric NAPL contents, the non-wetting fluid (oil) is disconnectedly distributed (i.e., immobile) in the soil samples, which means that θNAPL is close to the limiting “residual value”, and thus NAPL loses its ability to move in the soil in response to a hydraulic gradient (i.e., capillary retention forces are greater than gravitational forces, which tend to immobilize the NAPL; Brost and DeVaull, 2000).
The NAPL volumes removed for different washing solutions and the initial
volumetric content of NAPL are compared in Fig. 3. For all the three
cleaning solutions adopted, the experiments ultimately demonstrate (for a
fixed θNAPL) the same results in terms of soil decontamination, and they show that NAPL removal increases with increasing θNAPL. In some cases (i.e., θNAPL=0.15, 0.20 and 0.30), contaminated samples flushed with the wda no. 1 solution yield slightly higher removal efficiency values compared to the samples flushed with wd and wda no. 2. Martel et al. (1998) suggest the need to investigate the best water–surfactant–alcohol combination in order to enhance NAPL solubilization in soil.
Model calibration and validation
For the model (Eq. 10) calibration methodology, with reference to the three washing solutions (wd, wda no. 1 and wda no. 2), we analyze the effect of the measured dielectric permittivity on volumetric NAPL content (θNAPL) in order to estimate the α parameter of the model. The complete calibration dataset of estimated α parameters is reported in Table 1. The α parameter of the mixing model was determined, for a fixed θNAPL value and washing solution, by an optimization procedure based on the least-squares technique and was kept constant for each of the remediation tests developed.
Estimated α parameter of Eq. (10) for all three washing
solutions (wd, wda no. 1 and wda no. 2) and the volumetric NAPL content (θNAPL) tested.
A permittivity value of 3.70 was adopted for the solid phase. This value was
determined using the “immersion method”, which is commonly employed for estimating the εs of soils (Robinson and Friedman, 2003; Kameyama and Miyamoto, 2008; Comegna et al., 2013b).
For the sake of brevity, a selection of the experimental εs-ws-NAPL-θNAPL relationships (validation dataset) is reported in Fig. 4a–f. The data in Fig. 4 (except for Fig. 4e and f) show that some of the model-simulated values tend to overestimate the measured data. This behavior is mostly restricted to the beginning of the remediation process, when a rapid change in dielectric permittivity may be observed. This behavior was also verified in other tests (not shown here) and may be explained by invoking both NAPL properties such as liquid density; surface tension and viscosity; and soil properties including moisture content, relative permeability and soil porosity (Brost and DeVaull, 2000; Wang et al., 2013).
(a–f) Selection of observed (symbols) and modeled (dashed lines) volumetric NAPL content (θNAPL) versus dielectric permittivity (εs-ws-NAPL), with reference to the three washing solutions (wd, wda no. 1 and wda no. 2) used during the remediation tests.
Mercer and Cohen (1990) referred to the existence, in NAPL-contaminated
soils, of a “double fluid domain”, defined as the composition of the following: (i) mobile pools, which are NAPL-connected phases that move in the soil, and (ii) immobile residuals (i.e., low-permeability regions), which depend on small disconnected blobs or ganglia within the contaminated soil (see also Sect. 5.1 above). As long as the flushing continues, mobile pools are reduced and the oil tends increasingly to be trapped in the immobile areas. This means that, during soil cleaning, the capacity of non-wetting fluids to respond to gravitational forces gradually diminishes (Luckner et al., 1989). From a dielectric point of view, this mechanism may appear as a rapid dielectric permittivity increase (identified in Fig. 4 as a “fast oil mobility region”) within a few pore volumes. When this fast mobility mechanism is dominant, the predictions of Eq. (10) fail.
Another possible explanation for this discrepancy between the observed and
the predicted permittivity values may be linked to the propensity of
NAPL-water mixtures to form macroinclusions in the soil (Persson and
Berndtsson, 2002), which affected the initial pore-scale distribution of
NAPL, and thus the global dielectric response of the medium (Ferré et
al., 1996), during the first remediation stages.
However, since the phenomenon is mostly limited to the initial part of the
washing process, overall model effectiveness is not compromised, as also
shown in Table 2, which summarizes the goodness-of-fit statistical indices,
and in Fig. 5a–f, where the estimated θNAPL from Eq. (10) and the known θNAPL are illustrated in a series of 1:1 scatter plots.
(a–f) Measured (Eq. 10) vs. known volumetric NAPL content (θNAPL) of contaminated soils, with reference to the
different remediation tests in Fig. 4.
Model efficiency (EF) and mean bias error (MBE) statistical indices,
referring to measured and predicted (Eq. 10) volumetric NAPL content (θNAPL), calculated in the range of model applicability (0.15≤θNAPL≤0.40).
Overall, both graphical and quantitative evaluations in terms of MBE and EF
reveal the suitability of the dielectric model adopted to estimate the
volumetric NAPL content in the θNAPL range 0.15–0.40.
Conclusions
This paper presented an extensive dataset of remediation experiments that
were conducted on a laboratory scale using corn oil as a soil contaminant
and three different solutions for soil cleaning. The results of these tests
were employed to investigate the potential of the TDR technique in
monitoring the development of a steady-state decontamination process.
Dielectric data analysis showed that, during soil flushing, dielectric
permittivity behavior is highly dependent on the initial volumetric content
and intrinsic permittivity of the specific NAPL: “removal of NAPL produces an increase in bulk dielectric permittivity” due to the low value of oil permittivity. The experiments conducted also allowed us to calibrate and validate a dielectric mixing model (Eq. 10). The model outcomes are
encouraging; the calculated statistical indices confirmed a high accuracy in
NAPL predictions of the α model at different stages during soil
cleaning, with the only exception of the initial cleaning stage
(confined to the low values of T), where the eventual presence of a “fast flow region” may limit its applicability.
The approach requires additional experiments and datasets for model
calibration and validation in different pedological contexts, mainly to
confirm the potential of the methodology developed. Furthermore, an effort
should be made, introducing the water phase, ab initio in the experimental setup, to simulate a possible natural contamination–decontamination scenario more accurately. Finally, full field-scale tests should also be conducted to evaluate the performance of Eq. (10) in real field conditions.
Data availability
The dataset used in this paper is available on request to
alessandro.comegna@unibas.it.
Author contributions
The authors jointly collaborated on the development of the present research, which is based on ACom's idea.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
Review statement
This paper was edited by Marnik Vanclooster and reviewed by Ty P. A. Ferré, Magnus Persson, and one anonymous referee.
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