Tasked with the excavation, removal and
solidification of soil containing coal-tar by-products generated by a
former manufactured gas plant in New York, an experienced environmental
remediation firm decided to use a method that proved successful in
previous projects.
“The remediation is intended to remove and reduce the
mobility of contaminants that were deposited at the site by the former
manufactured gas facility during its operations from the early 1900s to
around 1950,” said Lech Dolata, project manager of the site for the
N.Y. State Department of Environmental Conservation. “If left
unchecked, contaminants at the site could be harmful to local residents
and they must be treated and/or removed.”
By erecting a large fabric structure
to enclose the area where contaminated soil is being excavated, the
remediation contractor increased public safety, preventing harmful
vapors and organic contaminants in the soil from escaping into the air.
To capture and cleanse air-borne contaminants released during digging,
this remediation enclosure structure will make use of activated carbon
adsorber systems that act as air purifiers.
Two fully-integrated activated carbon air purification
systems, each with a 100 horsepower blower, enable a cross airflow
zone by creating negative pressure inside the fabric structure. This
cross airflow zone provides workers inside the enclosure with a safer
environment to carry out their duties.
“The activated carbon filtration systems are being
used to protect the local community and help safeguard the workers who
are transferring contaminated soil to vehicles for transport and
consolidation,” said Dolata. “The intent is to reduce the discharge of
airborne contaminants into the atmosphere and to control the
environment inside and outside the structure.”
Running in tandem, the filtration systems process all
of the air in the remediation enclosure several times an hour. As the
contaminated air flow is drawn into the air purifier, fresh air enters
the edifice via louvers on the opposite end of the structure from the
blowers. Each blower requires three, four-foot by four-foot makeup
inlet air vents.
“Some contaminants that may be released during the digging include naphthalene, benzene,
toluene,
ethylbenzene, and
xylenes,”
said Jim Kearns, TIGG Corporation director of national accounts. “If
these compounds are present, your nose is the best way to tell. You’ll
definitely smell something.”
TIGG designs, manufactures, sells and provides
rental equipment for vapor and liquid phase applications in the
environmental remediation market. The company supplied the activated
carbon adsorption filtration equipment for the work at the site. TIGG
has provided equipment and solutions for similar remediation projects
more than 50 times over the past several years.
Moving air at a combined 40,000 cubic feet per minute,
the two blowers draw air into two activated carbon box adsorbers. Each
box adsorber contains approximately 16,000 pounds of activated carbon.
![Granular Carbon](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_tDpE6QKvc31T_WBTqG3ZCAp7LI_IKpNbE-tySOeq8Ka4qyd6hTVaobFm2pV5WRW4al1qOC7wwJ_1liMqQYyp9Te55mtQrsscjc2VqjW0EI6Q=s0-d)
Often
used as a filtration media for environmental remediation projects,
activated carbon has submicroscopic pores that accommodate organic
contaminants of various molecular sizes. The inner walls of the pores
provide the surface layer molecules essential for adsorption.
“One pound of carbon provides a surface area
equivalent to six football fields,” said TIGG Vice President Anthony
Mazzoni. “That’s about as much carbon as you can fit in the palm of your
hand.
Mazzoni, who has more than 30 years of activated
carbon industry experience, jointly published a paper entitled “What is
Activated Carbon and How Does it Work?” More information on the
properties of activated carbon can be found at
TIGG.com/what-is-activated-carbon.
As air moves from the blower into the box adsorber
filtration unit, it enters a chamber in the bottom of the 30-foot-long
container, where it approaches zero velocity. Pressure buildup pushes
the process stream upward through a bed of activated carbon.
Kearns explained that contact time with the carbon
and the velocity of flow through the bed are very important to the
adsorption process.
“The primary contaminant removal takes place as the
air moves through the first several inches of carbon,” Kearns said.
“The area of carbon where adsorption takes place is known as the mass
transfer zone.”
Over time, the submicroscopic pores in the carbon
bed accumulate as much adsorbate as they can handle and become spent.
The two modular activated carbon box adsorbers used in the project have
carbon beds approximately 36 inches deep.
This means that as lower layers become spent, the mass
transfer zone moves up higher in the carbon bed, leaving spent layers
beneath. The length of time it takes carbon to become spent is dictated
by the concentration of organic compounds present in the airstream
entering the unit and the airflow rate.
“As a remediation project progresses, the contents
of the entire box could become spent and require a change out,” Kearns
said. “We can run prediction models on how long a carbon bed will last
based on static contaminate levels. However, conditions in the field are
never static.”
Sample ports placed on the side of the box adsorber in
strategic spots to allow measurements to be taken to determine how far
the mass transfer zone has traveled. Using these sample ports, the
movement of the mass transfer zone can be tracked.
The duration of the project is expected to be two
years. The 16,000 pound bed will be closely monitored, and if the
effluent levels exceed a certain limit, the unit’s carbon may need
changed out.
Once the air has traveled through the bed and the
organic compounds are adsorbed, the polished air flows out stacks
located at the top of the unit. Verifiable testing procedures ensure
the effluent air exiting the system meets stringent air quality
standards.
“The remediation contractor works under the
requirements of the Community Air Monitoring Plan,” said Dolata. “The
company will continuously verify that the filtration system is working
properly. Local residents and workers at the site can be assured that
they are safe and that the air being reintroduced into the environment
is contaminant free.”