Field methods and example applications for the Min-Trap® mineral sampler |
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Authors: | Craig Divine Shandra Justicia-León Jennifer M Tilton Erika Carter Erik Zardouzian Katherine Clark Dora Taggart |
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Institution: | 1. Arcadis, Nixa, Missouri, USA;2. Arcadis, Guaynabo, Puerto Rico;3. Arcadis, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA;4. Arcadis, Hanover, Maryland, USA;5. Arcadis, San Luis Obispo, California, USA;6. Microbial Insights, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA |
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Abstract: | Important reactive minerals are commonly created during in situ groundwater remediation activities; for example, iron sulfides formed during enhanced reduction approaches can abiotically degrade many chlorinated solvents. However, cost-effective tools to evaluate these treatment processes in field applications are limited and the collection of samples to evaluate in situ mineral formation is costly due to drilling requirements. The new passive Min-Trap sampler is a simple and cost-effective tool that can directly measure the formation of reactive minerals in situ without the need for additional drilling or soil core collection. The methods presented here describe how Min-Traps deployed in conventional monitoring wells can measure reactive minerals and how these minerals can be identified through commercially available analytical methods. Several examples are presented that show how Min-Traps can be used to characterize the rate and spatial variability of reactive mineral precipitation and these data may support operation and optimization decisions. |
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