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University of California-Berkeley

Superfund Research Program

In Situ Destruction of Halogenated Superfund Contaminants With Persulfate-Generated Radicals

Project Leader: David L. Sedlak
Co-Investigator: Martyn T. Smith
Grant Number: P42ES004705
Funding Period: 2022-2027
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Project Summary (2022-2027)

After 40 years of research and field experience, the remediation of hazardous waste sites remains a substantial challenge. Over the past three decades, considerable progress has been made in the use of in situ treatment methods, such as bioremediation and permeable reactive barriers. Nonetheless, excavation and off-site disposal remains the most common remedial approach for soil and groundwater extraction (i.e., pump-and-treat) systems are still being employed at numerous Superfund sites. Among the emerging alternatives to these expensive approaches, in situ chemical oxidation (ISCO) has shown substantial potential for providing an effective means of remediating a variety of contaminants, including TCE and petroleum hydrocarbons. Despite its popularity, ISCO has proven difficult to use in the treatment of hydrophobic compounds and compounds that exhibit low reactivity towards hydroxyl radical and sulfate radical—the two strongest oxidants produced during the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide and peroxydisulfate (i.e., persulfate) in the subsurface.

The team is developing new in situ chemical remediation techniques capable of treating Superfund contaminants that often require expensive ex-situ methods, (fully halogenated organic solvents, polychlorinated biphenyl (PCBs), polybrominated biphenyl ethers (PBDEs), and per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS)) by employing Anaerobic Radical Treatment (ART).

In Aim 1, the researchers are developing and optimizing anaerobic thermally activated persulfate methods to dehalogenate recalcitrant contaminants. They are developing a kinetic model that accounts for temperature, pH, oxidant dose, contaminant concentration, and oxygen concentration.

In Aim 2, the project team is devising a method that employs the use of co-solvent flushing followed by ART. In anaerobic conditions, activated persulfate can react with alcohols to form carbon centered radicals that are able to degrade contaminants. They also predict that persulfate can activate at lower temperature in the presence of solvents, which will allow for more efficient treatment of complex chemical mixtures. This includes aqueous film-forming foams (AFFF) used at sites contaminated with halogenated solvents.

Aim 3 is focused on the discovery and fate of stable transformation products formed during ART. In collaboration with the In Situ Destruction of Halogenated Superfund Contaminants With Biological Radical Reactions project, the two teams are investigating biodegradability of transformation products in microcosm studies.

Aim 4 focuses on predicting possible modes of toxicity by utilizing computational toxicity models, screening with biomolecule assays, as well as established bioassay such as the Ames test. The results of this project could provide novel approaches for the remediation of highly halogenated emerging and legacy compounds in the environment, while providing new models and methods for minimizing toxic transformation products.

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