Brine spill remediation historically has focused on restoring surface soils by reversing the effects of excess salts—mainly sodium chloride. This may involve washing the salt out of the soil and countering the effects of clay dispersal with a calcium additive, or removing and replacing the contaminated soil, according to Sublette.But excavating yards of soil can be ecologically disruptive, and rinsing the soil may force brine contamination deeper into groundwater. At one North Dakota spill site, remediation experts are piloting a new in situ technique to extract and remove salts from the ground without having to remove the soil itself.
They are using an electrokinetic process called electromigration to separate salt molecules at the site.
The process involved creating a 10-foot-deep electrical field beneath the wetland by burying 24 hexagonal bundles of electrodes to run a low-voltage current through the soil.Chloride and sodium ions migrate toward opposite charges. “The electrical potential pulls the ions horizontally into collection wells rather than allowing them to migrate vertically into groundwater,” says Chris Athmer, an environmental scientist with Terran Corporation, the consulting firm running the project.Athmer says the passive process, with its minimal landscape footprint, takes up to 18 months to complete, depending on a site’s size and other factors. He believes electrokinetic remediation may be a good alternative to traditional remediation techniques for environmentally sensitive areas such as wetlands or areas where it is especially important to protect a groundwater source.It is the first time electrokinetic remediation has been used to clean up a brine spill site in the United States. The process, says Athmer, was modeled off of a similar technique called electroosmosis, which has been used successfully in Kentucky, Ohio, and Wisconsin to clean soil of industrial solvents, such as trichloroethylene.High levels of salinity associated with brine spills stress soil microbial communities, says Athmer. Changes in soil pH and temperature from the electrokinetic technique may impact soil microbes, too, although Athmer notes that changes in pH and temperature would be limited to within a few centimeters of the electrodes. He says these changes would be present only during the treatment and would likely reverse once sodium and chloride ions are removed from the soil. “Microbial communities typically thrive anywhere conditions are suitable for growth,” Athmer says. “Once near-background levels are achieved and site conditions are restored, microbial populations are expected to recover as well.”While he cannot yet comment on the success of the pilot project, which is still ongoing, Athmer says the process is working as expected. “It is removing and is going to continue removing a lot of mass,” he says. If successful, the project could help to refine industry best practices for brine spill remediation.“Of course the best solution is prevention,” says John Pichtel, a soil scientist at Ball State University in Indiana. “But that’s easier said than done.”
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