Advanced Groundwater Remediation, Inc.
ISGR/FPR Project in Indiana:
January 2006. Advanced Groundwater Remediation has completed a contract to
install two Floating Product Removal
wells and four In-Situ Groundwater
Remediation wells at a gas station site in Indiana. The two FPR wells were installed
approximately 90 feet either side of a monitoring well that has had as much as
three inches of floating gasoline. All
of the wells are installed offsite, in a residential neighborhood, with two of
the wells installed in residential front yards next to a major city
thoroughfare, two wells installed in residential back yards, and two wells
installed in the parkway next to the street and partially in the sidewalk in
front of two residences.
With
their limited surface expression, FPR and ISGR wells are ideal for this
residential setting. The well installed
in the sidewalk is wheel-chair friendly, presenting no obstruction to normal
use of the sidewalk. The absence of
aboveground equipment is especially attractive for the installations in
residential yards.
DDC Project in New York:
February 2006. Advanced Groundwater Remediation is assisting Wasatch environmental
(inventors of DDC technology) with a
large pilot study and installation at the National Heatset Printing site on
Long Island. Advanced Groundwater Remediation will provide all design work for the project, including design of
sixty-horsepower, 700-cfm blower systems for the in-well stripping wells to be
installed at the site.
A
one-well pilot DDC system will be installed in July of this year, with nine
more wells to be installed later in the year.
Successful Floating Product Removal
in Indiana:
March
2006. Two Floating Product Removal wells were
installed at a convenience store site in Indiana and began operations in
December 2005 and January 2006.
Floating product had been detected in onsite and offsite wells in the
past, but had not been seen, either onsite of offsite, for over two years.
Five weeks after beginning operation, floating product (gasoline) had collected in the groundwater depression created by one of the FPR wells (ISGR/FPR-2) and was detected in the skimmer well. (The skimmer pump was not installed at the client’s request.) Using only a bailer, a field tech removed 4.5 gallons of gasoline from the skimmer well. The next week another field tech removed 3.5 gallons of product, again with a bailer. The third week, using a peristaltic pump, a third field tech removed 5 gallons of gasoline. At the State’s request, the well will be bailed once more, next week. If gasoline is still present, the skimmer pump will be installed and full-time removal of floating product will begin.
The photograph shows the installation. ISGR/FPR-2 is beneath the Bilco doors in the front yard. This residence also has an ISGR well ISGR-4 no floating product capability) in the back yard. That well has been operating since August 2004. With no aboveground equipment, no noise, and no effluent, the system is entirely unobjectionable. So much so that the property owner consented to let us install ISGR/FPR-2 in the front yard. Recently the carbon was changed out (1,500 lb) at ISGR-4, after eleven months of operation. The average influent levels for the eleven-month period are given below. All effluent samples have been non-detect.
Influent (mg/L) Effluent
Benzene
1,928 ND
Ethylbenzene 177 ND
MTBE 101 ND
Toluene 39 ND
Xylenes 784
ND
FPR is a much more aggressive and effective means for
capture and removal of floating product than skimmer wells. Much higher removal rates are possible,
without extracting any water from the aquifer.
Updated Brochure Online:
April 2006. An updated version of our complete brochure is now available
online in .pdf format. The brochure has
been in use for several years, periodically updated to provide increasing
amounts of information on the technologies we use and the experience of the
firm. The brochure now covers
Blowerless Air Sparging, Blowerless In-Well Stripping, and Dissolved Oxygen
Enhancement technologies.
January
2007. On January 2, 2007, the US Patent Office issued patent 7,156,988 to
Steven L. Wilhelm for Floating Product Removal (FPR) technology. The use of a recirculating well to create a physical depression
in the groundwater surface allows much more rapid recovery and removal of
floating products than use of a skimmer pump without such a depression. FPR involves no extraction of groundwater
from the aquifer and thus involves no discharge challenges, permits, or costs.
FreeOxTM
Goes Green:
February 2010. AGWR
provided remediation approach, design, and implementation for an AFCEE (Air
Force Center for Environmental Excellence) project at Seymour Johnson AFB in North
Carolina. The jet fuel contaminants
(BTEX and C9 – C22 aromatics) are the result of a fuel line leak. The remediation uses two FreeOx systems, operating solely on solar
power. A photograph of the systems
during installation shows the solar array and the control panel, which are the
only aboveground equipment for the two systems. The FreeOxTM systems circulate the groundwater through
treatment wells; the groundwater is oxygenated up to full saturation on each
pass through the wells, using air as the oxygen source. Oxygenation will increase the natural
biodegradation of the contaminants.
Initial results show increases of dissolved oxygen from 1.57 mg/L to
6.15 mg/L.
