Abstract:
This research focused on the enhanced reductive dechlorination of trichloroethene
(TCE) and its surrogate, trichlorofluoroethene (TCFE), using two bioremediation
methods in anaerobic conditions. Two anaerobic bioremediation studies were conducted
to investigate the effects of microbial communities in the presence of different electron
acceptors and donors during anaerobic reductive dechlorination of TCE and TCFE. The
first study was conducted in the groundwater microcosm bottles, filled with groundwater
and sediments collected from Richmond site, CA. Parallel reductive dechlorination of
TCE and TCFE was evaluated in the presence of fumarate and its product, succinate,
while active reduction of high background concentrations of sulfate (2.5 mM) occurred.
Because sulfate was assumed as a favorable electron acceptor during reductive
dechlorination of chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons (CAHs), all microcosms receiving
TCE and TCFE with substrates showed enhanced reductive dechlorination activity and
even no substrate addition microcosms generated biotransformation products. From the
electron mass balance calculations, more than 87.5% of electrons went to sulfate reduction and less than 10% of available electrons involved in dechlorination after sulfate
reductions. After amending varying concentrations of sulfate (0 2.5 mM), no inhibition
was found between reductive dechlorination of TCE and sulfate reduction. The result
indicated that reductive dechlorination could be directly competed with sulfate reduction
for available electrons.
The second study investigated the effectiveness of in situ push-pull tests to
evaluate bioaugmentation in physical aquifer models (PAMs) using dehalogenating
strains to reductively dechlorinate TCE to ethene and TCFE to FE in the TCE
contaminated sediments. Complete reduction of TCE to ethene occurred in less than 14
days with repeated additions of TCE (13.0 to 46.0 mg/L) and TCFE (15.0 mg/L) was
completely transformed to FE in under 24 days. Increased rate and extent of
dechlorination in the bioaugmented PAM compared to the nonaugmented control PAM
indicated successful transport of the bioaugmented culture through the PAM. Similar
transformation rates and time course of TCE and TCFE also indicated that TCFE was a
bioprobe for reductive dechlorination of TCE. TCE and TCFE were transformed to cisdichloroethene
(c-DCE) and cis-dichlorofluoroethene (c-DCFE) respectively at two of
the three sampling ports after 50 days of incubation in the nonaugmented PAM indicating
reductive dechlorination activity of indigenous microorganisms. The results showed that
it is possible to increase the rate and extent of reductive dechlorination of TCE and TCFE
by bioaugmentation and that push-pull tests are effective tools for detecting and
quantifying these processes in situ.
The third study focused on numerical modeling of the second study. The
objectives of this study were (1) to evaluate a simplified method for estimating retardation factors for injected solutes and bioaugmented microorganisms using "pushpull"
test injection phase breakthrough curves, (2) to identify whether bioaugmented
microorganisms have kept the same transformation capacity of Evanite culture using
Michaelis-Menten kinetics by the values provided by Yu et al. (2005) and to verify in situ
rates of TCFE reductive dechlorination rates of push-pull tests by numerical modeling,
and (3) to investigate a reasonable answer for the nonuniform recovery of ethene and FE
during the activity test and the push-pull test. The bioaugmented microorganisms were
effectively transported through Hanford sediment. The estimated retardation factor was
1.33. A numerical simulation predicted cell transport in the PAM as far as port 5. This
was qualitatively confirmed by cell counts obtained during bioaugmentation but, cells
were distributed nonuniformly. The transport test indicated that TCE and TCFE transport
was relatively retarded compared to coinjected bromide tracer (retardation factors ranged
from 1.33-1.62 for TCE and from 1.44-1.70 for TCFE). The modeling simulation of
Michaelis-Menten kinetics for the activity test was well matched for reductive
dechlorination rates for TCE and less dechlorinated ethenes using the previous published
values of kmax and Ks of chlorinated ethenes by Yu et al. (2005); the model match
indicated that the bioaugmented microorganisms kept the same transformation capacity
as the original source, Evanite culture (Yu et al., 2005) over 4 months in the PAM. A
numerical simulation resulted in the simple first order FE production rate of 1 day'
using STOMP code (2002) and the value of FE production rate was in the range of the
transformation rates of TCFE during the activity test. The bioaugmented PAM has caused
slow loss of injected CAHs during the activity test and the push-pull test.