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In Situ Electromigration as a Method for Removing Sulfate, Metals, and Other Contaminants from Ground Water
Authors:Donald D Runnells  Catherine Wahli
Institution:Donald D. Runnells (Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309–0250) received his B.S. in geology from the University of Utah, and his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Harvard University. He works in the geochemistry of water, with special emphasis on rock-water interaction and contamination by inorganic chemicals. He is author or co-author of about 75 technical papers. He serves as associate editor of the journal Applied Geochemistry and has served on the Water Science and Technology Board of the National Research Council. He is a corporate consultant to the environmental consulting firm of Shepherd Miller Inc., Ft. Collins, Colorado, and serves as professor and chair of the Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Colorado, Boulder.;Catherine Wahli (Colombi Schmutz Dorthe AG, Konzumstrasse 20, 3007 Bern, Switzerland) received her B.S. degree from the University of Mississippi and her M.S. degree from the University of Colorado, Boulder. She works as an environmental geochemist with the firm of Colombi Schmutz Dorthe AG, Bern, Switzerland. Her most recent work has been in the field of nuclear waste disposal, as related to aqueous geochemistry.
Abstract:Electromigration is proposed as an in situ method for preconcentrating contaminants in ground water prior to pumping and treating. In earlier investigations by the senior author and co-workers, it was found that Cu in synthetic ground water migrated strongly to a Pt cathode and plated out as metallic copper. In the present study, carbon electrodes were inserted into a laboratory column of fine quartz sand that was saturated with a lower concentration of CuSO4 solution. A fixed potential of 2.5 V was applied, causing dissolved Cu and SO4 to accumulate strongly at the cathode and anode, respectively. Only minor plating-out of Cu took place on the carbon electrodes. In addition to the use of carbon electrodes, the present research also investigated the effects of a lower concentration of metal, accumulation of SO4 adjacent to the anodes, adsorption of Cu on the sand, and competition by moving ground water.
At an imposed voltage of 2.5 V and in the presence of 65 mg/L of dissolved Cu and 96 mg/L of SO4 (0.001 M CuSO4 solution), electrolysis of water caused large changes in the pH and speciation of the aqueous components, as well as precipitation of solid Cu-hydroxides. Significant retardation of Cu occurred in the presence of ground water flowing at an average intergranular velocity of 0.2 m/day, but only minor retardation at water velocities of 1.9 and 2.9 m/day.
Sulfate tends to migrate strongly to the anodes, suggesting that in situ electromigration may offer a useful new method for preconcentrating such highly soluble ions as SO4, NO3, and CI that are difficult to remove by conventional pump-and-treat methods. A number of potential problems exist that should be addressed in a field test.
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