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Resuspension of polychlorinated biphenyl-contaminated field sediment: Release to the water column and determination of site-specific K DOC
- Source :
- Graduate School of Oceanography Faculty Publications
- Publication Year :
- 2011
-
Abstract
- Sediments from the New Bedford Harbor (NBH) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) Superfund site (Massachusetts, USA), contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), were resuspended under different water column redox conditions: untreated, oxidative, and reductive. The partitioning of PCBs to the overlying water column was measured with polyethylene samplers and compared to partitioning without resuspension. Greater concentrations of total aqueous (freely dissolved + dissolved organic carbon (DOC)-associated) PCBs were found in all resuspended treatments for PCBs with mid-range K OWs, but no difference was observed in total aqueous concentrations among different redox conditions. The magnitude of increased concentrations depended on resuspension time and congener K OW, but ranged from approximately one to eight times those found without resuspension. In a parallel study, DOC was flocculated and removed from smaller-scale NBH sediment resuspensions. In situ K DOCs were determined and used to calculate freely dissolved and DOC-associated fractions of the increase in total aqueous PCB concentrations due to resuspension. The importance of DOC-associated PCBs increased with increasing K OW. In situ K DOCs were approximately one to two orders of magnitude greater than those calculated with a commonly used linear free energy relationship (LFER). The present study demonstrates that resuspension of contaminated sediments releases PCBs to the water column, of which a significant fraction are DOC-associated (e.g., 28, 65, and 90% for PCBs 28, 66, and 110, respectively). Results also imply that site-specific PCB K DOCs are superior to those calculated with generic LFERs. © 2010 SETAC.
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- Graduate School of Oceanography Faculty Publications
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1435581761
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource