Air Sparging at Fort Greely, Alaska Presented by Aung Syn & James Powell.
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Transcript of Air Sparging at Fort Greely, Alaska Presented by Aung Syn & James Powell.
![Page 1: Air Sparging at Fort Greely, Alaska Presented by Aung Syn & James Powell.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081603/56649cad5503460f9496f7ef/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Air Sparging at Fort Greely, Alaska
Presented by
Aung Syn & James Powell
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Location
• The Texas Tower Site, U.S. Army’s Fort Greely military facility.
• Population 461 residents.
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Background
• The Texas Tower Site consists of four buildings.
• While demolition of one of the buildings in 1990, a release of petroleum hydrocarbons was discovered.
• Originated from an underground fuel line which supplied heating oil to the demolished building from an aboveground storage tank.
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Contaminant
• Soils consisted mainly of sand, gravel, cobble, and silt.
• Approximately 6,300 cubic yards of contaminated soil.
• Spread: vertically 50 feet deep and horizontally off an area of 5,655 square feet.
• Groundwater was encountered between 23 and 50 ft below ground surface.
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Contaminant
• Diesel fuel (No. 2 fuel oil) consists of unbranched paraffin.
• Flammability: High
• Toxicity: High
• Two of the three monitoring wells where contaminated.
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Technology Used• Method i) Air Sparging System
• Two air sparging wells drilled of depth 55 ft with 2-inch-diameter.
• Provided 23-60 cfm of air to the saturated zone.
• Operated for 18months.
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• Method ii) Soil Vapour Extraction System
• Three SVE wells were drilled to 52 feet with 4-inch-diameter.
• Soil vapour was removed from the wells at a rate of 600 cfm.
• Operated for 18months.
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• On 15 August, 1995, 4,000 gallons of nutrient solution was injected into the SVE Wells.
• Nutrient solution was a mixture of 50 lbs of fertilizer to 1,000 gallons of water.
• Use of micro organisms to degrade contaminants to obtaining harmless chemicals as end products.
• Method iii) In Situ Bioremediation
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Timeline
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Result
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Conclusion• Treatment in soil and groundwater met the remedial
goals.
• Highly contaminated soil had been excavated and treated off site.
• The leaking fuel lines that had been the source of the release had been removed.
• No compounds for which maximum contaminant levels have been detected at the site for more than two years of monitoring after completion of cleanup.
• Total Cost of Cleanup: $295,760