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Semivolatile organic decay rates in pilot‐scale solid‐ and slurry‐phase bioreactors
Author(s) -
Yare Bruce S.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
remediation journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.762
H-Index - 27
eISSN - 1520-6831
pISSN - 1051-5658
DOI - 10.1002/rem.3440020108
Subject(s) - land reclamation , bioremediation , environmental science , refinery , slurry , waste management , ethylbenzene , refining (metallurgy) , environmental remediation , environmental engineering , engineering , chemistry , contamination , catalysis , ecology , biochemistry , biology
A variety of process byproducts and residues were reclaimed at the Brio Refining Superfund site, an abandoned jet fuel refinery located near Houston, Texas. Among the operations that took place at the site were regeneration of acrylonitrile synthesis catalysts, styrene reprocessing still bottoms to recover ethylbenzene, and the attempted reclamation of 1,2‐dichloroethane from vinyl chloride process residues. Incoming process byproducts and residues were stored in unlined impoundments before reclamation, until the Texas Air Control Board had the impoundments closed under court order in 1979. After the pits were closed, two pilot‐scale bioremediation demonstrations were performed on the backfilled impoundments. The results of these studies indicated that bioremediation of the organic residues and affected soils at the site was included as an acceptable treatment technology in the Record of Decision. This article compares the degradation rates achieved by the two different biological treatment processes used to treat the organic material in the impoundments.