2004
RESEARCH PROJECTS
Field Studies
|
PROJECT: |
Field-Scale
Evaluation Of Biological Uranium Reduction And Reoxidation
In The Near-Source Zone At The Nabir Field Research Center In Oak
Ridge, Tn |
PRINCIPAL
INVESTIGATOR: |
Craig
Criddle |
Field
Studies |
Over the past three years we designed, fabricated, and are now operating a field
research station that enables controlled studies of microbial U(VI) reduction
in the near-source zone at the NABIR Field Research Center. The station
has both above- and below-ground elements. The aboveground system
removes contaminants that interfere with controlled experiments and U(VI) reduction,
such as aluminum, calcium, and nitrate. The below-ground system consists
of two injection and extraction well pairs. One pair defines an outer flow
cell. This cell is connected to the aboveground system, enabling injection of
clean, treated water into the outer cell. The second well pair is nested
within the first, and includes provisions for removal of N2 and addition of electron
donor and alkalinity. Water quality is monitored at multilevel sampling wells
within the inner cell. Breakthrough profiles indicate that water is efficiently
transported between the injection and MLS wells, with short breakthrough times.
We have obtained evidence of denitrification and biological U(VI) removal within
this zone. We propose to advance this work through a series of "single pass" field
experiments in which well-defined solutions of uranium and tracer are injected
into the inner cell. Reduction experiments will explore hypotheses related to
the rate and extent of U(VI) reduction and the role of microbial community composition
in stabilization of the process. Single pass re-oxidation experiments will similarly
test hypotheses related to the concentration and duration of oxidant and strategies
for stabilization of the reduced system to prevent remobilization of uranium
when an oxidant enters the system. These experiments will be accompanied
by complementary laboratory studies and modeling. Our overall goal is to develop
the operational strategies, tools and understanding needed to enable long-term
stabilization of uranium in the near-source zone. Anticipated outcomes include
(1) improved knowledge and information on the rates and mechanisms of microbially
mediated U reduction and immobilization, (2) information needed to enhance the
long-term stability of a remediated site; (3) a validated reactive transport
model, (4) trained students, and (5) a published body of work that will inform
and enhance future research and remediation activities for immobilization of
uranium and other radionuclides.
PROJECT: |
Field-Integrated
Studies of Long-Term Sustainability of Chromium Bioreduction
at Hanford 100H Site |
PRINCIPAL
INVESTIGATOR: |
Terry
Hazen |
Field
Studies |
The project build upons and expands an ongoing NABIR-EM project Field
Investigations of Lactate-Stimulated Bioreduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III)
at Hanford 100H. Pilot field-scale testing is in progress,
intermediate key findings using Hanford sediments are: the presence
of several types of bacteria, including Bacillus/Arthrobacter and Geobacter species,
could contribute to effective Cr(VI) bioreduction; and injection
of lactate/polylactate (Hydrogen Release Compound - HRCTM) is an
effective method for Cr(VI) bioreduction in ground water. We
also determined that because Cr(VI) reduction in sediments is diffusion
rate-limited, a small fraction of Cr(VI) in groundwater could remain
unreduced and continue moving with the regional flow. In addition,
the presence of dissolved oxygen within the zone of fluctuations
of the water table and the existence manganese oxides could cause
a small portion of Cr(III) to reoxidize to Cr(VI). The main
goals of field-integrated studies are to investigate coupled hydraulic,
geochemical, and microbial conditions, and to determine critical
biogeochemical parameters necessary to maximize the extent of Cr(VI)
bioreduction and minimize Cr(III) reoxidation in ground water. The
project will include field monitoring, using water sampling and geophysical
methods, of the active zone of Cr(VI) bioreduction and Cr(III) reoxidation
in groundwater at the Hanford 100H site. Using the results
of field monitoring, we will design bench-scale flow-through column
experiments to obtain diffusion and kinetic parameters characterizing
Cr(VI) bioreduction and Cr(III) reoxidation. To simulate coupled
biological and geochemical processes, we plan to develop a new multiphase,
multicomponent 3D reactive transport code, TOUGHREACT-BIO, which
will be calibrated to bench-scale column experiments and validated
with field tests and monitoring. An improved understanding
and ability to predict the biogeochemical-hydrogeological conditions
under which Cr-bioreduction is sustainable will facilitate the transfer
of our conceptual and numerical models to other analogous Hanford
and DOE contaminated sites with a variety of metal contaminants.
PROJECT: |
Stability
of U(VI) and Tc(VII) Reducing Microbial Communities to Environmental
Perturbation: Development and Testing of a Thermodynamic Network
Model |
PRINCIPAL
INVESTIGATOR: |
Jonathan
Istok |
Field
Studies |
Rationale: In situ field experiments
at the NABIR Field Research Center have shown that cooperative metabolism
of denitrifiers and Fe(III)/sulfate reducers is essential for creating
subsurface conditions favorable for U(VI) and Tc(VII) bioreduction
(Istok et al., 2004). Although much has been learned
about the physiology and metabolic potential of specific microorganisms
with these capabilities that have been isolated from the FRC and
other sites using pure cultures of microorganisms, major gaps exist
in our understanding of the functioning of these organisms when they
are present in intact microbial communities. For example, although
ongoing NABIR studies have demonstrated the large genetic diversity
of subsurface microorganisms at the FRC, many of these have never
been isolated in pure culture. Yet it is the collective metabolic
capability of these largely uncharacterized microorganisms that must
be relied on for effective U(VI) and Tc(VII) bioimmobilization.
Research
Goal and Hypotheses:The overall goal of this project is to develop
and test a thermodynamic network model for predicting the effects
of substrate additions and environmental perturbations on the composition
and functional stability of subsurface microbial communities. The
overall scientific hypothesis is that a thermodynamic analysis
of the energy-yielding reactions performed by broadly defined groups
of microorganisms can be used to make quantitative and testable
predictions of the change in microbial community composition that
will occur when a substrate is added to the subsurface or when
environmental conditions change.
Approach: The
proposed research will be conducted at the FRC using four intermediate-scale
(~ 2 m) bioreactor models currently deployed in Areas 1 and 2. The
network model will be used to predict the effects of substrate additions
on the microbial community composition in the bioreactors by predicting
the growth of major metabolic groups of organisms (aerobes, fermenters,
denitrifiers, Fe(III)/sulfate/metal reducers). Model predictions will be tested
by quantifying changes in the abundance of each of these groups using
a combination of functional genes and lipid analysis. The
network model will also be used to examine the stability of the U(VI)
and Tc(VII) reducing microbial communities to changing environmental
conditions. These predictions will be tested by challenging the
microbial community in the bioreactors with a series of perturbations
representative of those likely to occur (due to heterogeneity in groundwater
geochemistry) in a full-scale bioreactor at the FRC. These will
include variations in pH, nitrate, and sulfate concentrations in the
bioreactor influent.
Project
Significance: As will be shown below,
the ability to predict the effects of donor addition on change inmicrobial
community composition is essential for creating conditions that favor
the long-term stability of bioreduced U and Tc. Moreover, the ability
of a microbial community to maintain functional stability (i.e. maintain
high rates of U(VI) and Tc(VII) reduction) when subjected to various
environmental perturbations (e.g., fluctuating pH and concentrations
of electron acceptors) is of critical importance for the ultimate use
of bioimmobilization at DOE legacy waste sites. The principal
immediate significance of this project will be in establishing and testing
a theoretical framework for designing and interpreting complex field
experiments and to aid in “bridging-the-gap” between basic
NABIR laboratory and field research.
PROJECT: |
Factors
Controlling In Situ Uranium and Technetium Bio-Reduction and Reoxidation
at the NABIR Field Research Center |
PRINCIPAL
INVESTIGATOR: |
Jonathan
Istok |
Field
Studies |
Rationale: Ongoing laboratory and field studies
by our group have demonstrated that it is possible to stimulate denitrification
and microbially-mediated U reduction at FRC Area 1. Microcosm
studies showed that (1) NO3- removal is necessary for U reduction,
(2) rates of U reduction are limited by the availability of suitable
electron donors, (3) rates of U reduction are greatly reduced below
pH 5, and (4) NO3- and the products of denitrification can rapidly
reoxidize (and therefore remobilize) microbially-reduced U. Although
denitrification has been successfully stimulated in field tests
(as measured by NO2- production) through the addition of various
electron donors (e.g. acetate, glucose, and ethanol), unequivocal
evidence for U reduction has yet to be obtained, in part because
NO3- levels, although reduced, have remained high following donor
addition. Similar processes are believed to control the reduction
pertechnetate (Tc(VII)O4-) to Tc(IV)-containing mineral phases, although
the limited scope of our current project precludes their examination. Note
that although Tc concentrations are monitored during our ongoing
field tests, unequivocal evidence for Tc reduction following electron
donor addition has not been obtained.
Research Goal and Hypotheses: The
overall goal of this project is to better understand factors and
processes controlling microbially-mediated reduction and reoxidation
of U and Tc in the unconsolidated residuum overlying the Nolichucky
shale in FRC Areas 1 and 2. Based on the results of ongoing
laboratory and field research conducted by our group in Area 1,
we have developed five hypotheses to be tested by the proposed
research:
- The
small rates of denitrification and U bio-reduction observed in
laboratory incubations of sediments from Area 1 at low pH (< 5)
are due to the presence of high concentrations of toxic metals
(especially Al and Ni). Rates of Tc reduction will also
be small at low pH in the presence of high concentrations of
toxic metals.
- In situ rates of U and perhaps Tc bio-reduction can be increased
by increasing system pH and thus precipitating toxic metals
from solution.
- In situ rates of U and Tc bio-reduction can be increased by the
addition of humic substances, which complex toxic metals such
as Al and Ni, buffer pH, and serve as electron shuttles to facilitate
U and Tc reduction.
- Microbially-reduced U and Tc are rapidly oxidized in the presence
of high concentrations of NO3- and the denitrification intermediates
NO2-, N2O, and NO.
- An
electron-donor-addition strategy (type and form of donor, with
or without pH adjustment and with or without the co-addition
of humic substances) can be devised to reduce U and Tc concentrations
for an extended period of time in low pH groundwater in the presence
of high concentrations of NO3-, Al, and Ni. This
strategy operates by removing or complexing these components of
FRC groundwater to allow the subsequent reduction of U(VI) and
Tc(VII).
Approach: Hypotheses will be addressed by
an extensive series of field push-pull tests supported by detailed
geochemical analyses and laboratory microcosm experiments. Field
tests will be conducted in wells in Areas 1 and 2; laboratory studies
will utilize groundwater and sediment from the same locations. Detailed
geochemical analyses will be performed to quantify radionuclide and
toxic metal speciation, complexation, precipitation, and co-precipitation
as a function of pH, electron donor, and humic substances. Microcosm
studies will be conducted with live and killed microorganisms in
sediments (1) to examine effects of toxic metal
concentrations on U and Tc reduction with and without electron donor
and humic substances additions and with and without pH adjustment,
and (2) to examine the effects of denitrification reactions on the
rates of reoxidation of microbially-reduced U and Tc. Field push-pull tests will be designed to parallel laboratory
microcosm studies. Changes in U and Tc speciation in sediment and groundwater
will be determined in laboratory and field samples following electron donor and/or
humic substances addition.
PROJECT: |
In
situ microbial community control
of the stability of bio-reduced uranium |
PRINCIPAL
INVESTIGATOR: |
David
White |
Field
Studies |
The long-term
stability of microbially reduced uranium in the subsurface is a pivotal
issue for the eventual application of biostimulation (e.g. electron
donor amendment) as a means of bioremediation of uranium contaminated
groundwater. Recent field experiments (Anderson et al. 2003 and
unpublished data) demonstrate that U(VI) can be removed from groundwater
by electron donor amendment at the field scale. It was also observed
that several months after electron donor (acetate) amendment, some
U(VI) reduction was maintained. We hypothesize that, while Geobacter
dominates the microbial population during the metal reduction phase,
the ongoing U(VI) reduction may be related to metabolically versatile
sulfate reducers. Furthermore, precipitated FeS0.9 is not sufficient,
without microbial mediation, to reduce U(VI) under subsurface conditions
of flowing groundwater.
However,
direct estimation of reoxidation rates is difficult under field conditions. We
propose a series of in situ experiments
using in-well sediment incubators that will enable direct measurement
of U(IV) removal rates from pre-reduced sediments withspecific
microbial and mineralogic amendments. By comparing U(IV) loss rates
with different DIRB and SRB populations we will be able to clearly determine
the relative impact of sulfate reducers vs. Fe reducers. The approach
we propose also makes it possible to assess actual in situ conditions
during the experiment and to directly observe reoxidation (or bioreduction)
end points after the field experiment is completed without drilling. Finally,
in-well sediment incubators are relatively inexpensive and could ultimately
displace both field-scale electron donor amendment experiments and push-pull
tests as the preferred means of assessing site response to bioremediation
and long-term stability of both biostimulated and naturally bioattenuated
sites.
[Back
to Award Recipients Page]
|