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In-situ and on-site technologies; An overview

Abstract

A broad analysis of and perspective on the characteristics and measured performance of in-situ and on-site treatment technologies available for remediation of contaminated soils, groundwater and associated debris at hazardous waste sites. Included in the analysis is information from U.S. and European sources. Available data are appended from nine recently completed field demonstrations from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation (SITE) program. The most frequently applied technology areas appear to be on-site thermal treatment for organics, on-site and in-situ solidification/stabilization technologies for most inorganics and metals, traditional on-site water treatment techniques, and soil vapor extraction for volatile organic compounds. Rapidly developing areas include bioremediation technologies, and concentration technologies. Two of the weakest areas include materials handling for such situations as excavating buried drums and soils with volatiles safely, and performing physical and chemical site characterization using technology-sensitive parameters. An area worthy of international cooperatin is that of performing benchscale screening and treatability studies, including the specification of key parameters needing measurement, techniques for such measurement and for interpretation, storage and retrieval of resulting data. We are in the process of evaluating existing treatability study data on soils and debris, and will be installing that data onto  More>>
Authors:
Freestone, F J [1] 
  1. Technical Support Branch, ORD, RREL, U.S. EPA, Edison, New Jersey (US)
Publication Date:
Jan 01, 1990
Product Type:
Miscellaneous
Report Number:
CONF-9004294-
Reference Number:
DK-91-001208; EDB-91-053367
Resource Relation:
Conference: Conference on in-situ and on-site remediation of contaminated soil and groundwater, Lyngby (Denmark), 4 Apr 1990; Related Information: In: In-situ and on-site remediation of contaminated soil and groundwater, 144 p
Subject:
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES; DECONTAMINATION; SOILS; GROUND DISPOSAL; GROUND WATER; HAZARDOUS MATERIALS; WASTES; CLEANING; HYDROGEN COMPOUNDS; MANAGEMENT; MATERIALS; OXYGEN COMPOUNDS; WASTE DISPOSAL; WASTE MANAGEMENT; WATER; 540220* - Environment, Terrestrial- Chemicals Monitoring & Transport- (1990-)
OSTI ID:
5936982
Research Organizations:
Danmarks Tekniske Hoejskole, Lyngby (Denmark). Inst. for Teknisk Geologi
Country of Origin:
Denmark
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ISBN: 87-88699-68-4
Availability:
Available on loan from Risoe Library, DK-4000 Roskilde
Submitting Site:
DK
Size:
Pages: 1-11; (144 p)
Announcement Date:
May 13, 2001

Citation Formats

Freestone, F J. In-situ and on-site technologies; An overview. Denmark: N. p., 1990. Web.
Freestone, F J. In-situ and on-site technologies; An overview. Denmark.
Freestone, F J. 1990. "In-situ and on-site technologies; An overview." Denmark.
@misc{etde_5936982,
title = {In-situ and on-site technologies; An overview}
author = {Freestone, F J}
abstractNote = {A broad analysis of and perspective on the characteristics and measured performance of in-situ and on-site treatment technologies available for remediation of contaminated soils, groundwater and associated debris at hazardous waste sites. Included in the analysis is information from U.S. and European sources. Available data are appended from nine recently completed field demonstrations from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation (SITE) program. The most frequently applied technology areas appear to be on-site thermal treatment for organics, on-site and in-situ solidification/stabilization technologies for most inorganics and metals, traditional on-site water treatment techniques, and soil vapor extraction for volatile organic compounds. Rapidly developing areas include bioremediation technologies, and concentration technologies. Two of the weakest areas include materials handling for such situations as excavating buried drums and soils with volatiles safely, and performing physical and chemical site characterization using technology-sensitive parameters. An area worthy of international cooperatin is that of performing benchscale screening and treatability studies, including the specification of key parameters needing measurement, techniques for such measurement and for interpretation, storage and retrieval of resulting data. We are in the process of evaluating existing treatability study data on soils and debris, and will be installing that data onto an on-line information system available to the public world-wide. (AB) 10 refs.}
place = {Denmark}
year = {1990}
month = {Jan}
}