Water (Mar 2020)

Injection of Zerovalent Iron Gels for Aquifer Nanoremediation: Lab Experiments and Modeling

  • Federico Mondino,
  • Amelia Piscitello,
  • Carlo Bianco,
  • Andrea Gallo,
  • Alessandra de Folly D’Auris,
  • Tiziana Tosco,
  • Marco Tagliabue,
  • Rajandrea Sethi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w12030826
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 826

Abstract

Read online

One of the main technical problems faced during field-scale injections of iron microparticles (mZVI) for groundwater nanoremediation is related to their poor colloidal stability and mobility in porous media. In this study, a shear-thinning gel, composed of a mixture of two environmentally friendly biopolymers, i.e., guar gum and xanthan gum, was employed to overcome these limitations. The slurry rheology and particle mobility were characterized by column transport tests. Then, a radial transport experiment was performed to mimic the particle delivery in more realistic conditions. The gel, even at a low polymeric content (1.75 g/L), proved effective in enhancing the mobility of high concentrated mZVI suspensions (20 g/L) in field-like conditions. The high radius of influence (73 cm) and homogeneous iron distribution were achieved by maintaining a low injection overpressure (<0.4 bar). Based only on the information derived from column tests, the MNMs 2018 software (Micro- and Nanoparticle transport, filtration, and clogging Model-Suite) was able to predict the particle distribution and pressure build-up measured in the radial domain. Experimental and simulated results showed good agreement, thus proving that a simplified experimental-modeling procedure based on 1D column tests could be used to effectively upscale the slurry behavior to more representative scales, e.g., radial domains.

Keywords