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Retardation of volatile organic compounds in ground water in low organic carbon sediments
Author(s) -
F. Hoffman
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/39598
Subject(s) - aquifer , total organic carbon , sorption , environmental chemistry , groundwater , carbon fibers , adsorption , dispersion (optics) , diffusion , degradation (telecommunications) , matrix (chemical analysis) , environmental science , chemistry , materials science , geology , organic chemistry , geotechnical engineering , chromatography , composite material , telecommunications , physics , optics , composite number , computer science , thermodynamics
It is postulated that adsorption onto aquifer matrix surfaces is only one of the processes that retard contaminants in ground water in unconsolidated sediments; others include hydrodynamic dispersion, abiotic/biotic degradation, matrix diffusion, partitioning to organic carbon, diffusion into and retention in dead-end pores, etc. This work aims at these processes in defining the K{sub d} of VOCs in sediments with low organic carbon content. Experiments performed include an initial column experiment for VOC (TCE and perchloroethylene(PCE)) retardation tests on geological materials, PCE and TCE data from LLNL sediments, and a preliminary multilayer sampler experiment. The VOC K{sub d}s in low organic carbon permeable aquifer materials are dependent on the VOC composition and independent of aquifer grain size, indicating that sorption was not operative and that the primary retarding factors are diffusion controlled. The program of future experiments is described

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