Application of polycolloid-releasing substrate to remediate trichloroethylene-contaminated groundwater: A pilot-scale study

•A slow polycolloid-releasing substrate for continuous carbon supplement is developed.•The developed substrate contains vegetable oil, molasses, and two types of surfactants.•Addition of developed substrate can create anaerobic conditions.•Gene analysis is useful in evaluating the effectiveness of T...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2014-03, Vol.268, p.92-101
Hauptverfasser: Tsai, T.T., Liu, J.K., Chang, Y.M., Chen, K.F., Kao, C.M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A slow polycolloid-releasing substrate for continuous carbon supplement is developed.•The developed substrate contains vegetable oil, molasses, and two types of surfactants.•Addition of developed substrate can create anaerobic conditions.•Gene analysis is useful in evaluating the effectiveness of TCE biodegradation.•Complete TCE removal is obtained after injecting the slow polycolloid-releasing substrate. The objectives of this pilot-scale study were to (1) evaluate the effectiveness of bioremediation of trichloroethylene (TCE)-contaminated groundwater with the supplement of slow polycolloid-releasing substrate (SPRS) (contained vegetable oil, cane molasses, surfactants) under reductive dechlorinating conditions, (2) apply gene analyses to confirm the existence of TCE-dechlorinating genes, and (3) apply the real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to evaluate the variations in TCE-dechlorinating bacteria (Dehalococcoides spp.). Approximately 350L of SPRS solution was supplied into an injection well (IW) and groundwater samples were collected and analyzed from IW and monitor wells periodically. Results show that the SPRS caused a rapid increase of the total organic carbon concentration (up to 5794mg/L), and reductive dechlorination of TCE was significantly enhanced. TCE dechlorination byproducts were observed and up to 99% of TCE removal (initial TCE concentration=1872μg/L) was observed after 50 days of operation. The population of Dehalococcoides spp. increased from 4.6×101 to 3.41×107cells/L after 20 days of operation. DNA sequencing results show that there were 31 bacterial species verified, which might be related to TCE biodegradation. Results demonstrate that the microbial analysis and real-time PCR are useful tools to evaluate the effectiveness of TCE reductive dechlorination.
ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2014.01.004