Science Inventory

USE OF CATIONIC SURFACTANTS TO MODIFY AQUIFER MATERIALS TO REDUCE THE MOBILITY OF HYDROPHOBIC ORGANIC COMPOUNDS

Citation:

Westall, J., J. Wagner, H. Chen, AND B. Brownawell. USE OF CATIONIC SURFACTANTS TO MODIFY AQUIFER MATERIALS TO REDUCE THE MOBILITY OF HYDROPHOBIC ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/S-94/002.

Description:

Cationic surfactants can be used to modify surfaces of soils and subsurface materials to promote sorption of hydrophobic organic compounds (HOC) and retard their migration. or example, cationic surfactants could be injected into an aquifer downgradient from a source of HOC contamination to provide a temporary barrier against migration. ossible side effect of such a treatment could be the mobilization of previously adsorbed metal ions through cation exchange with the carbonic surfactant. atch and column experiments were performed to investigate these phenomena. he cationic surfactant was dodecylpyridium (DP); the HOC were chlorobenzene homologs; competing metal ions were Pb2+, Cd2+, and CU2+, and sorbents were low-organic-carbon aquifer materials (Lula, EPA-12; Borden Sand) and pristine minerals (kaolinite, montmorillonite). he investigation covered three major topics: (i) adsorption of DP to particle surfaces; (ii) sorption of chlorobenzenes to DP-modified surfaces; and (iii) adsorption competition between DP and the metal ions. he adsorption isotherms of DP were distinctly nonlinear, even at very low surface concentrations. he distribution of DP was strongly dependent on the solution concentrations of NA+ and Ca2, but virtually independent of solution pH. ultisite adsorption model was developed to describe adsorption over a wide-range of DP, NaCl, and CaCl, concentrations. wo types of adsorption reactions were found to be significant; exchange of DP with a alkali-metal carbon, and adsorption of pyridinium with chloride counter-ion. istribution ratios of the chlorobenzenes varied nonlinearly with DP loading of the surface. he elution of chlorobenzenes from columns packed with DP-treated aquifer material showed significant retardation with only moderate amounts of DP on particle surfaces. ransport model based on results of the batch experiments and the local equilibrium assumption yields an acceptable approximation for the coelution of DP and HOC from the column. t is concluded that treatment of surfaces with carbonic surfactants shows promise as a means of promoting HOC sorption in a variety of treatment processes. omparison of the adsorption isotherms of DP, Pb2+, Cd2+, Cu2+ shows that DP is adsorbed more strongly than the metal ions from solutions at pH 5.5 - 6.0. ompetition experiments suggest that DP and the metal ions adsorb to different types of sites, and that competition becomes significant only when about half the CEC of the material is occupied by DP. hese results suggest that adsorbed metal ions could not effectively be removed by washing aquifer material with DP, but that aquifer materials could be treated with DP to retard HOC without danger of mobilizing adsorbed metal ions.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:04/16/2004
Record ID: 34452