Toluene removal from sandy soils via in situ technologies with an emphasis on factors influencing soil vapor extraction

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Abstract

The integration of bioventing (BV) and soil vapor extraction (SVE) appears to be an effective combination method for soil decontamination. This paper serves two main purposes: it evaluates the effects of soil water content (SWC) and air flow rate on SVE and it investigates the transition regime between BV and SVE for toluene removal from sandy soils. 96 hours after air injection, more than 97% removal efficiency was achieved in all five experiments (carried out for SVE) including 5, 10, and 15% for SWC and 250 and 500 mL/min for air flow rate on SVE. The highest removal efficiency (>99.5%) of toluene was obtained by the combination of BV and SVE (AIBV: Air Injection Bioventing) after 96 h of air injection at a constant flow rate of 250 mL/min. It was found that AIBV has the highest efficiency for toluene removal from sandy soils and can remediate the vadose zone effectively to meet the soil guideline values for protection of groundwater. © 2014 Mohammad Mehdi Amin et al.

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APA

Amin, M. M., Hatamipour, M. S., Momenbeik, F., Nourmoradi, H., Farhadkhani, M., & Mohammadi-Moghadam, F. (2014). Toluene removal from sandy soils via in situ technologies with an emphasis on factors influencing soil vapor extraction. The Scientific World Journal, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/416752

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