Subscriber access provided by NORTHERN KENTUCKY UNIV STEELY
Article
Measuring and Modeling Organochlorine Pesticide Response to Activated Carbon Amendment in Tidal Sediment Mesocosms Jay M Thompson, Ching-Hong Hsieh, Thomas P Hoelen, Donald P. Weston, and Richard G Luthy Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b05669 • Publication Date (Web): 04 Apr 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 5, 2016
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 32
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Measuring and Modeling Organochlorine Pesticide Response to Activated Carbon
2
Amendment in Tidal Sediment Mesocosms
3 4 5
JAY M. THOMPSON†, CHING-HONG HSIEH†, THOMAS P. HOELEN‡, DONALD P.
6
WESTON§, RICHARD G. LUTHY*,†
7 8
†
9
94305-5080, USA
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA
10
‡
Chevron Energy Technology Company, San Ramon, CA 94583, USA
11
§
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3140,
12
USA
13 14
Corresponding author:
15
Richard G. Luthy
16
Stanford University Room 191, Yang & Yamazaki Environment & Energy Building,
17
473 Via Ortega, Stanford, California 94305-4020
18
Email:
[email protected] 19
Telephone: 650-721-2615
20
Fax: 650-725-9720
21
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
22
ABSTRACT
23
Activated carbon (AC) sediment amendment for hydrophobic organic contaminants
24
(HOCs) is attracting increasing regulatory and industrial interest. However, mechanistic
25
and well-vetted models are needed. Here, we conduct an 18-month field mesocosm trial
26
at a site containing dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and chlordane. Different AC
27
applications were applied and, for the first time, a recently-published mass transfer model
28
was field tested under varying experimental conditions. AC treatment was effective in
29
reducing DDT and chlordane concentration in polyethylene (PE) samplers, and
30
contaminant extractability by Arenicola brasiliensis digestive fluids. A substantial AC
31
particle size effect was observed. For example, chlordane concentration in PE was
32
reduced by 91% 6-months post treatment in the powdered AC (PAC) mesocosm,
33
compared with 68% in the GAC mesocosm. Extractability of sediment-associated DDT
34
and chlordane by A. brasiliensis digestive fluids was reduced by at least a factor of ten in
35
all AC treatments. The model reproduced the relative effects of varying experimental
36
conditions (particle size, dose, mixing time) on concentrations in polyethylene passive
37
samplers well – in most cases within 25% of experimental observations. While
38
uncertainties such as the effect of long-term AC fouling by organic matter remain, the
39
study findings support the use of the model to assess long-term implications of AC
40
amendment.
41
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 32
Page 3 of 32
Environmental Science & Technology
42
Introduction
43
As activated carbon (AC) amendment of sediments contaminated by hydrophobic organic
44
contaminants (HOCs) matures as a remedial technology1-6, there has been increasing
45
emphasis7 on collecting field data8-11 and on developing mechanistic models describing
46
mass transfer5, 12-15 in AC-amended sediments. The former allows researchers to assess
47
the feasibility of AC amendment at scale and effectiveness in a natural environment. The
48
latter is necessary to understand long-term AC performance in the field. Such an
49
understanding is needed to create effective remedial designs, as there can be significant
50
differences between field and laboratory performance. For example, Zimmerman et al.
51
reported 3.4% (m/m dw) AC reduced polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) pore water
52
concentration in Hunters Point Shipyard (HPS), CA, USA sediment by 92% after 6
53
months of continuous mixing under laboratory conditions1. However, Cho et al.,
54
observed only a 50% reduction in sediment pore water PCB concentration 6 months post-
55
treatment at the pilot-scale 8, 9. In contrast Beckingham and Ghosh reported reductions of
56
69-99% in Lumbriculus variegatus tissue PCB concentration 3 years post-treatment in a
57
pilot study at the Grasse River, NY, USA10. Beckingham and Ghosh attribute the
58
difference in kinetics between the two pilot studies to differences in sediment
59
characteristics and PCB congener mix, manifested, for example, in the different sediment
60
desorption rates10. These cases underscore the need for models to understand site-specific
61
effects and treatment conditions on AC performance.
62 63
Choi et al., presented a mass transfer model (itself an extension of published AC models12,
64
13, 16
) describing transfer processes governing AC amendment: advection, dispersion, and
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
65
intra-particle diffusion14, 17. The model predicted pore water concentrations of PCBs and
66
alkylated PAHs to within a factor of two compared to column tests. However, model
67
field-testing is needed for two reasons18. Firstly, column studies only approximate field
68
conditions and cannot encompass all field variables. Secondly, field validation will
69
encourage the model’s widespread application.
70 71
One challenge with field validation is scale. Effective model validation requires that
72
several experimental conditions be varied. If treatment plots are sized in the tens to
73
hundreds of m2 range that is typical in literature,
74
needed. For example, Cho et al. applied the aforementioned mass transfer model to
75
several 34 m2 field plots, but did not systematically vary AC application conditions15.
76
Here, field mesocosms were used to achieve the study goals without a large treatment
77
area and its concomitant resource requirement.
78
This work has three major outcomes. First, we observed several treatment condition
79
effects on AC performance with respect to organochlorine pesticide concentration in pore
80
water (as estimated by passive sampler observations) and bioavailability. Second, we
81
validated the Choi et al. mass transfer model under field conditions. Third, we assessed
82
the long-term site implications after AC amendment. This study is the first field test of
83
the Choi et al. model14 under varying experimental conditions.
9-11
a large and complex field effort is
84 85
Materials and Methods
86
Materials.
87
Pesticide-grade solvents were purchased from Fischer Scientific (Fair Lawn, NJ). Ten
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 32
Page 5 of 32
Environmental Science & Technology
88
organochlorine pesticides were examined, cis- and trans-chlordane, trans-nonachlor, 2,4′-
89
and
90
dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene, and dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane, respectively),
91
and 4,4′-DDMU (dichlorodiphenylmonochloroethylene). Pesticide standards were
92
purchased from Ultra Scientific (North Kingstown, RI). Activated carbon (Type-TOG,
93
Calgon Carbon, Pittsburgh, PA) was used as received (median diameter, D50 = 219 µm,
94
measured by laser diffraction, Particle Technology Labs, Downers Grove, IL) for
95
mesocosms amended with granular activated carbon (GAC). The same material was
96
ground to a powder (D50 = 42 µm) using a stone mill for powdered activated carbon
97
(PAC) application.
4,4′-DDT,
DDE,
and
DDD
(dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane,
98 99
Field Site and Study Design.
100
The field site for this study was a tidal channel within an industrial property in Northern
101
California, USA, with sediments containing the organochlorine pesticides DDT and
102
chlordane. Partially enclosed mesocosms were used to study the effect of varying AC
103
treatment conditions. Mesocosms were fabricated from 61-cm (24-inch nominal)
104
diameter high-density polyethylene (HDPE) pipe cut to 0.90 m lengths. Twelve 5-cm
105
diameter holes were drilled into each mesocosm as shown in Figure 1 to allow water
106
exchange with channel waters. Photographs are available in the Supporting Information,
107
Figure S1.
108 109
The study employed six mesocosms: one mixed control, one unmixed control, and four
110
mixed AC treatments. The treatment conditions within the four AC-amended mesocosms
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
111
were 5% (m/m dw) GAC and PAC mixed for 10 minutes, 10% GAC mixed for 10
112
minutes, and 5% GAC mixed for 20 minutes. An additional 50% of AC over nominal
113
values were used to account for potential overmixing into deeper sediment strata than
114
intended and ensure that the target AC dose was delivered to the mixing zone (i.e., 7.5%
115
AC was added to ensure that a 5% dose was achieved in the target depth interval). Note
116
these levels were selected for mass transport model validation and were not intended to
117
explore the whole range of typical deployment scenarios. For example, AC doses above
118
5% are rarely used in the field and particle size much larger than studied here have been
119
employed in field studies7, 19. A schematic diagram of the experiment is available in the
120
Supporting Information, Figure S2. The mixed control mesocosm was mixed for 10
121
minutes without AC. The unmixed control mesocosm was not mixed or amended.
122 123
Mesocosms were deployed in November 2012. Prior to placing the mesocosms,
124
vegetation lining the creek bank was scraped away with an excavator (Figure S3). The
125
mesocosms were then positioned adjacent to one another and pushed into the sediment by
126
the excavator. AC was then deposited into the appropriate mesocosms and mixed into the
127
upper 15 cm of the sediment for the prescribed duration (10 or 20 minutes), with a dual
128
head electric mortar mixer (Collomix CX-44 DUO, Gaimersheim, Germany).
129
Photographs of the preparation of the area and placement of the mesocosms are available
130
in the Supporting Information, Figure S3.
131 132
Mesocosm Deployment and Field Sampling.
133
Three observations were made: one baseline, one 6-months post-treatment, and one 18-
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 32
Page 7 of 32
Environmental Science & Technology
134
months post-treatment, commencing February 2013, May 2013, and May 2014,
135
respectively. The duration between AC deployment and sampling events was made on
136
the basis of a short proof-of-concept field study. A timeline of field events is presented in
137
the Supporting Information, Figure S4. The baseline measurements, consisting of six
138
sediment cores and ten low density polyethylene (PE) samplers, were taken immediately
139
outside of the mesocosms. At each post-treatment observation, two PE samplers were
140
deployed inside each mesocosm, at least 15 cm from the mesocosm wall and 30 cm from
141
each other. Mass transport modeling indicated that the distance between the HDPE pipe
142
and PE samplers was sufficient to avoid interference (see Supporting Information). As no
143
attempt was made to convert PE concentrations to pore water concentration, performance
144
reference compounds were not added to the PE prior to deployment. Rather, PE
145
concentrations are reported relative to measurements in untreated control mesocosms and
146
baseline measurements. Further details on polyethylene passive samplers are available
147
elsewhere20, 21. Upon retrieval of each PE sampler, a sediment core sample was collected
148
at the same location.
149 150
The six mesocosms and three sampling events were used to test the effect of AC particle
151
size, AC particle dose, AC mixing time, and deployment duration on amendment
152
performance. This experimental design and allocation of sampling allowed for a number
153
of comparisons to be made: inside the mesocosms with outside the mesocosms, control
154
mesocosms with treatment mesocosm, treated zone with untreated zone within a
155
mesocosm, and temporal trends. However, the spatial density of sampling precluded
156
replicate mesocosms or numerous temporal observations. Instead, spatial variability
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
157
within a mesocosm was addressed by placing two samplers (each sectioned to 12
158
segments) in each mesocosm for each sampling event. Spatial variability within the entire
159
study area was addressed with the baseline measurements and modeling (Supporting
160
Information Figure S5-S7). While greater certainty could be obtained with baseline
161
measurements in tandem with duplicate or triplicate mesocosms, such a study design
162
would result in an unmanageable number of samples if the same sample depth resolution
163
was retained.
164 165
For passive sampler measurements, a polyethylene strip (52 µm, 0.92 g/cm3, Brentwood
166
Plastics, St. Louis, MO) was wrapped around a slotted stainless steel frame. The
167
approximate strip dimensions were 90 × 2 cm, which resulted in sampling over a 45-cm
168
depth. Samplers were embedded in the sediment for 28 days. Upon retrieval, samplers
169
were cleaned with a lint-free tissue, sectioned to 2.5 and 5.0 cm depth intervals (within
170
the 0-15 and 15-45 cm intervals, respectively), wrapped in aluminum foil and stored in a
171
glass jar at 4 ºC. Samples were held for 15 cm) strata, were extracted using gut fluid from the polychaete Arenicola
186
brasiliensis. Details are in the SI, but briefly, the approach is an in vitro assay that
187
quantifies how much of the sediment-associated contaminant may be desorbable from the
188
particles during passage through a deposit-feeder’s gut, and would thus be available for
189
uptake23-27. Specific extraction procedures (e.g., dose, extraction time) are as described by
190
Weston et al. with some minor modifications28. Gut fluid from A. brasiliensis (0.9 ml)
191
was mixed with wet sediment equivalent to 0.3 g dry weight. After a 2.5 h extraction, the
192
gut fluid was recovered and analyzed for the organochlorine pesticides of interest. In
193
parallel with the gut fluid extractions, the sediments were also extracted with a sodium
194
taurocholate solution, a synthetic cocktail designed to mimic the contaminant
195
solubilization properties of actual gut fluid29 and with artificial seawater as a control. The
196
purpose of the sodium taurocholate extractions was to test it as a potential compliment to
197
gut fluid, given the difficulty in collecting the latter. The contaminant extraction
198
efficiency of all fluids was expressed as percent solubilization (mass of contaminant in
199
the extractant as a proportion of that initially in the dry sediment extracted). Initial
200
concentrations in each sediment stratum were determined from the mean of the five to six
201
baseline core samples (Table S1).
202
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 10 of 32
203
Model Description.
204
The mass transfer model employed in this study is described elsewhere14. Briefly, HOC
205
transport in AC amended sediment is modeled as the sum of three processes: intraparticle
206
diffusion in sediment and AC, dispersion in sediment pore water, and advection. This is
207
described by Equation 1.
208 = + + −
− −
# 3 + " $% ! !
(1)
&' 3 () *+ 2-! *+ &' % − . − 0 &' ! *+ /*+
209 210
where CW is the aqueous concentration; Sf, Ss, SAC, and SPE are the volumetric
211
concentrations (g cm-3) in fast- and slow-releasing sediment fractions, in AC, and in PE,
212
respectively; Rf, Rs, and RAC particle diameters (cm) of fast- and slow-releasing sediment
213
particles (collectively, Rsed) and of AC, respectively; VW, Vsed, VAC and VPE are the
214
volumes (cm3) of water, sediment, AC and PE, respectively; Dx, Dy, Dz are the dispersion
215
coefficients (cm2 s-1) in each dimension; Rsed and RAC are the radii (cm) of sediment and
216
AC, respectively; k0 (cm s-1) is the overall mass transfer coefficient for the PE-water
217
boundary layer; xPE is the PE thickness (cm); vsz is the porewater seepage velocity (cm s-
218
1
) and KPE is the PE-water partitioning coefficient (cm3 g-1).
219
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 11 of 32
Environmental Science & Technology
220
The system is modeled over two periods: an initial well-mixed period and a stagnant
221
period. During the well-mixed phase that simulates brief initial mechanical mixing, mass
222
transfer is a function of intraparticle diffusion12. The results of the well-mixed period
223
become initial conditions to the stagnant period in which advection-dispersion,
224
intraparticle diffusion, and particle distributions are considered.
225 226
Model Parameterization.
227
Site-specific modeling parameters were determined in laboratory experiments as
228
indicated in Table S2, with literature values used when appropriate. Aqueous equilibrium
229
pesticide concentrations in the unamended sediment were obtained by agitating triplicate
230
sediment slurries with PE samplers on an orbital shaker at 80 rpm for 28 days. The
231
aqueous pesticide concentration can be estimated as CW = CPE/KPE, where KPE is the PE-
232
water partition coefficient.
233 234
It was assumed that AC was homogenously distributed and that AC-water partitioning
235
coefficients derived in clean water apply. Although fouling by dissolved organic mater
236
(potentially due to pore blocking at the AC external surface30, 31) has been shown to
237
reduce the activated carbon partitioning coefficient (KAC) of hydrophobic compounds by
238
a factor of 100 or more6, most of the literature on similar systems report attenuation by a
239
factor of approximately ten or less14,
240
attenuation at a similar magnitude would not affect the response in pore water
241
concentration for the duration of the experiment – see Supporting Information.
31-34
. A sensitivity analysis indicated that KAC
242
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
243
Sediment desorption rates were determined in triplicate well-mixed sediment slurries
244
exposed to Tenax TA (60/80 mesh, Sigma) as described by Werner et al12. After
245
predetermined periods from 6 h to 160 d, the Tenax was collected and replaced. The
246
Tenax was extracted in hexane and the sediment desorption rate determined by fitting the
247
pesticide mass in Tenax to a known radial diffusion model35. Full details of desorption
248
and aqueous equilibrium procedures are available in the Supporting Information. Pore
249
water velocity was conservatively assumed to be zero. Literature reports suggest that pore
250
water advection-dispersion does not significantly affect HOC mass transport in AC-
251
amended sediments in tidally-influenced environments16, 17.
252 253
Results and Discussion
254
Baseline Assessment.
255
The average DDT concentration in sediment (reported as the sum of 2,4′- and 4,4′-DDT,
256
DDE, and DDD and 4,4′-DDMU) was 296 ± 35 µg/kg (mean ± standard deviation, n =
257
18) in composite samples from a depth interval of 0-15 cm and 403 ± 67 µg/kg (n = 15)
258
in the 15-30 cm interval. DDTs were dominated by DDT metabolites, with DDE and
259
DDD comprising 92% of the overall DDT mass in sediment. Chlordane (reported as the
260
sum of cis- and trans-chlordane and trans-nonachlor) sediment concentrations were 399 ±
261
40 µg/kg (n = 18) and 546 ± 113 µg/kg (n = 15) in the 0-15 cm and 15-30 cm interval,
262
respectively. Cis- and trans-chlordanes made up 77% of the chlordane mass in sediment.
263 264
Baseline PE measurements suggested increasing concentration with depth, consistent
265
with the coring data. At 5 cm depth, the average DDT concentration was 124 ± 17 ng/g (n
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 32
Page 13 of 32
Environmental Science & Technology
266
= 15) and the average chlordane concentration in PE was 235 ± 28 ng/g. At 35 cm depth,
267
the PE concentration increased to 173 ± 14 ng/g and 397 ± 40 ng/g for DDT and
268
chlordane (n = 15), respectively. The 150 PE observations were used to construct a three-
269
dimensional site model of the relative concentrations within the mesocosm area. This site
270
model was then used to interpret post-treatment observations. A discussion of the
271
baseline assessment and site model is available in the Supporting Information.
272 273
Activated Carbon Distribution in Mesocosms.
274
Measurements of TOC indicated that the AC dose delivered to the nominal treatment
275
depth interval of 0-15 cm was equal to or greater than the design dose (Figure S8).
276
Sediment TOC was related to AC dose with Equation 29: 123&' = 45 − 45! /86.1 − 45100%
(2)
277 278
where TOC (%) is for an amended core section, 86.1 is the TOC of the type TOG AC (as
279
measured by Cho et al.8), DoseAC is the AC dose (% dw) and TOC0 is the average TOC at
280
the corresponding position within the mixed control mesocosm. Measured AC doses were
281
in line with the nominal applied dose (Figure S8). Overall, there was little spatial
282
variability in AC dose within the mixed zone in a given mesocosm, with the standard
283
deviation of the observed AC dose on the order of 10-25%. This homogeneity can be
284
attributed to the intense mixing imparted to the sediment by the impeller.
285 286
AC recoveries of 118%, 98%, 110%, and 117% were observed for the 5% GAC, 5%
287
PAC, 10% GAC, and 5% GAC 2× mix mesocosms, respectively. The recovery
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
288
calculations here account for the entire core, not just the nominal treatment zone.
289
Significant AC was recovered below the nominal treatment zone, indicating overmixing
290
with respect to depth.
291 292
BC measurements closely agreed with AC dose estimates by TOC (see Figure S9),
293
confirming the suitability of TOC measurements for AC dose estimation. To confirm
294
visual observations that untreated sediments were deposited into the mesocosms, the
295
black carbon content (BC) of the thin (~2-5 mm), topmost layer of soft sediment was
296
measured and compared to the BC content of the overall AC amendment zone (0-15 cm).
297
If sediment from outside the mesocosms settled into the mesocosms, the BC content of
298
the surficial sediment would be less than the overall AC amendment zone, as the settled
299
sediment would be relatively free of black carbon while the mixed zone would have
300
elevated BC content due to AC addition. BC, rather than TOC, was used in this
301
comparison to limit any bias due to settlement of organic-rich material. The surficial
302
sediment BC content was found to be significantly (four-way ANOVA, p < 0.05) lower
303
than the composite mixed zone– up to a factor of 7. Along with visual observations, this
304
provides an additional line of evidence that untreated sediment settled into the
305
mesocosms.
306 307
Response in Pesticide PE Concentration.
308
For all AC treatments, the PE pesticide concentrations within the treatment zone were
309
significantly reduced compared to the mixed control and to the deeper PE samples. PE
310
pesticide concentration depth profiles were compiled 6 and 18 months after treatment for
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 14 of 32
Page 15 of 32
Environmental Science & Technology
311
chlordane and DDT (Figure 2 and Figure 3). An example depth profile with the
312
corresponding TOC profile is presented in Figure 2 for the 10% GAC mesocosm, 18-
313
month observation. Omitting the most surficial sample, the variability of the duplicate PE
314
samples was low, typically ? C>?,IJKELJC,! C>?,ABCDEFGB = H M H M C>?,IJKELJC C>?,!
(3)
336 337
where CPE,Relative is the relative pesticide PE concentration normalized to the mixed
338
control mesocosm, CPE is the pesticide PE concentration within a treatment mesocosm,
339
CPE, Control is the PE pesticide concentration in the mixed control mesocosm at the depth
340
corresponding to the original sample, and CPE,
341
baseline concentrations. Data from the surficial zone, as shown in Figure 2, are neglected
342
from these composite measurements. Six months post-treatment, PE samplers contained
343
71 and 76 % less chlordane and DDT, respectively, in the 5% GAC mesocosm compared
344
to the mixed control. Similarly, chlordane and DDT PE concentrations were both 71%
345
lower in the 10% GAC mesocosms compared to the mixed control. Chlordane and DDT
346
concentrations were 65 and 75% lower, respectively, in the 5% GAC mesocosm with 2×
347
mixing. Reductions were more significant in the 5% PAC mesocosm, with chlordane and
348
DDT concentrations 93 and 94% lower, respectively, in the 5% PAC mesocosms
349
compared to the mixed control.
Control,0
and CPE,
0
are the pesticide PE
350 351
PE pesticide concentration within the treatment zone significantly (4-way ANOVA, p
0.50), as
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 18 of 32
Page 19 of 32
Environmental Science & Technology
400
indicated in Figure 3. For example, 6 months post-treatment, PE chlordane concentration
401
was reduced by 71% in the 5% GAC mesocosm and 71% in the 10% GAC mesocosm.
402
Chlordane PE concentration was reduced by 88% and 91% in the 5% and 10% GAC
403
mesocosm at 18 months post-treatment, respectively.
404 405
There was no significant mixing duration effect on PE chlordane concentration within the
406
nominal treatment zone (4-way ANOVA, p > .10), as shown in Figure 3. PE chlordane
407
concentration within the 5% GAC mesocosm with 20 minutes mixing time was reduced
408
by 65 and 85% 6 months and 18 months post-treatment, respectively, compared with
409
71% and 88% in the 10-minute mixed GAC mesocosm. The response with respect to
410
DDT was similar, with DDT reductions of 75 and 84% 6 months and 18 moths post-
411
treatment, compared with 76 and 83% in the 10-minute mixed GAC mesocosm. Mixing
412
can enhance the AC performance by uniformly distributing AC particles which results in
413
shorter diffusion distances between particles14, but these results imply that 10-minute
414
mixing was sufficient to homogenize the sediment. Neglecting the effect of mixing on
415
sediment homogenization, the long-term mass-transport effect of mixing is minimal at
416
these mixing durations (see Figure S15). However, note that field deployment at scale
417
will likely not achieve the degree of homogenization observed here9.
418 419
Gut Fluid Extraction.
420
In all treatment mesocosms, AC amendment reduced the pesticide mass solubilized by
421
the A. brasiliensis digestive fluids or the taurocholate synthetic analog. In control
422
treatments lacking AC, quantifiable gut fluid extraction efficiencies typically ranged from
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 20 of 32
423
0.2-2% for most analytes, and never exceeded 3.1% (Figures S16, S17). Such values are
424
typical for other hydrophobic substances in field-collected sediments, for example, high
425
molecular weight PAH extraction efficiencies are typically 0.1-10%24-26,
426
organochlorines of the present study are insecticides that have not been used locally in at
427
least 30 years, and the gut fluid results indicate approximately 99% of the sediment-
428
bound residues cannot be extracted under digestive conditions even without AC addition.
27
. The
429 430
Within the 0-15 cm composite sediment sample, addition of AC reduced gut fluid
431
extractability even further. At the 6-month sampling point, extractability for DDT and
432
chlordane declined from approximately 0.3-0.7% in the unmixed control treatment to
433
near 0 in all AC treatments. Note that while there is some difference in extraction
434
efficiency between the mixed and unmixed controls, these differences also appear in PE
435
measurements from outside the mesocosm (Figure S7), suggesting the difference stems
436
from a localized area of high concentration near the unmixed control is not an effect of
437
the mixing. At the 18-month time point, extractability declined from approximately 1.0-
438
1.5% in the unmixed control to approximately 0.1% in all AC treatments. It appeared to
439
make little difference whether 5 or 10% AC was used, whether PAC or GAC, or whether
440
mixed for 10 or 20 min. There was a high degree of correlation in the amount of
441
contaminant solubilization by gut fluid and the taurocholate mimic (Figure S18). At both
442
the 6-month and 18-month sampling point, the extraction efficiency of the two fluids was
443
highly correlated (p