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In situ remediation of contaminated marinesediment: an overview. | LitMetric

In situ remediation of contaminated marinesediment: an overview.

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int

Department of Civil, Environmental, Land, Building Engineering and Chemistry (DICATECh), Technical University of Bari, Via Orabona 4, 70125, Bari, Italy.

Published: February 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sediment can trap harmful contaminants, which can harm both human health and the environment over time.
  • Dredging can release these pollutants back into the water, making traditional cleanup methods riskier than in situ treatments that keep sediments in place.
  • The study reviews various in situ remediation techniques, noting that while activated carbon methods are established, there are still gaps in knowledge regarding the effectiveness and long-term impacts of these approaches.

Article Abstract

Sediment tends to accumulate inorganic and persistent hydrophobic organic contaminants representing one of the main sinks and sources of pollution. Generally, contaminated sediment poses medium- and long-term risks to humans and ecosystem health; dredging activities or natural resuspension phenomena (i.e., strongly adverse weather conditions) can remobilize pollution releasing it into the water column. Thus, ex situ traditional remediation activities (i.e., dredging) can be hazardous compared to in situ techniques that try to keep to a minimum sediment mobilization, unless dredging is compulsory to reach a desired bathymetric level. We reviewed in situ physico-chemical (i.e., active mixing and thin capping, solidification/stabilization, chemical oxidation, dechlorination, electrokinetic separation, and sediment flushing) and bio-assisted treatments, including hybrid solutions (i.e., nanocomposite reactive capping, bioreactive capping, microbial electrochemical technologies). We found that significant gaps still remain into the knowledge about the application of in situ contaminated sediment remediation techniques from the technical and the practical viewpoint. Only activated carbon-based technologies are well developed and currently applied with several available case studies. The environmental implication of in situ remediation technologies was only shortly investigated on a long-term basis after its application, so it is not clear how they can really perform.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-016-8281-xDOI Listing

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