Platform Presentations
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
18:00 - 20:00 Welcome Reception and Registration
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
08:30 - 09:30 REGISTRATION
09:30 - 10:00 Welcome Address
Jürgen Staupe
(The Saxon State's Ministry of Environment
and Agriculture, GERMANY)
10:00 - 10:30 KEYNOTE LECTURE - The Upcoming European
Soil Framework Directive - Consequences
for Management and Remediation of
Contaminated Land
Jörg Frauenstein (UBA, GERMANY)
SESSION I - Risk Assessment and Sediment Management
Chairman: Peter Werner (TUD, GERMANY)
10:30 - 10:55 Air Monitoring in the Vicinity of MGP
Remediations ...................................... 5
Dennis Unites, Robin DeHate, Brian Skelly
(GEI Consultants, Inc., USA)
10:55 - 11:20 Soil Vapor Intrusion Assessment of Residential
and Commercial Properties in the Northeastern
United States ..................................... 6
David Terry, Robin DeHate
(GEI Consultants, Inc., USA)
11:20 - 11:45 Risk Assessment and Site Redevelopment: New
Opportunities to Manage Large Portfolios of
MGP Sites in Italy ................................ 7
Roberto Scazzola, Rudi Ruggeri, Daniele Venneri,
Stefania Verdelocco
(ENSR, ITALY)
11:45 - 12:10 Innovative Approach for Establishing Remedial
Objectives for PAHs in Sediment .................. 14
David Nakles, Nicholas Azzolina, Joseph P.
Kreitinger
(ENSR, USA)
12:10 - 13:30 LUNCH BREAK
13:30 - 14:00 KEYNOTE LECTURE
Interactive Use of Modern In-Situ-investigation
Techniques for Efficient Site Investigation -
Preconditions for an Effective Remediation
Planning ......................................... 21
Jochen Grossmann, Michael Neuhaus, Gunnar
Laudel, Lars Tischer, Kai Müller
(GICON, GERMANY)
PARALLEL SESSIONS (II and III+IV)
SESSION II - Site Investigation and Natural Attenuation
Chairman: Jörg Weindl (BFM, GERMANY)
14:00 - 14:25 Best Practices Manual for Managing and
Investigating Coal Tar DNAPL in Bedrock .......... 29
Andrew Coleman, Bernie Kueper
(EPRI, USA)
14:25 - 14:50 What is Representative of the Environment ........ 32
Philip Mulvey, Louise Cartwright
(EESI Contracting, UK)
14:50 - 15:15 Comparison of Laboratory and In-Situ Based
Groundwater Investigations of a Coking Plant
Site in Castrop-Rauxel ........................... 33
Anne Berahoff, Anja Berning, Christoph
Wortmann, Reinhard Wienberg, Bernd Mahro
(University of Applied Sciences Bremen,GERMANY)
15:15 - 15:40 Single-Event Driven Release and Rate-Limited
Mass Transfer of PAH from Coal Tar at MGP
Sites ............................................ 43
Kai Uwe Totsche, Markus Wehrer, Thilo Rennert
(Friedrich-Schiller-Universitat Jena, GERMANY)
15:40 - 16:10 COFFEE BREAK
Chairwoman: Juliane Hollender (Eawag, SWITZERLAND)
16:10 - 16:35 Comparison of Groundwater and Contaminant Mass
Fluxes Derived with Integral Pumping Tests and
Point Sampling ................................... 48
Michael Dietze, Peter Dietrich
(Technische Universitat Dresden, GERMANY)
16:35 - 17:00 Biodegradation of Mono- and Polyaromatic
Hydrocarbons at a Former Cokery Evidenced
by Isotopes and Metabolites ...................... 59
Barbara Morasch, Daniel Hunkeler, Patrick
Höhener,Brice Temime
(University of Neuchatel, SWITZERLAND)
17:00 - 17:25 Natural Attenuation at Tar Oil Contaminated
Site. Case Study ................................. 68
Peter Werner, Norbert Hüsers, Stefan Schönekerl,
Helmut Lorbeer, Carsten Leibenath
(Technische Universitat Dresden, GERMANY)
17:25 - 17:50 Biodegradation of Polyaromatic Hydrocarbons
under Aerobic Conditions: Capacities of
Microflorae and Limited Accessibility ............ 75
Denis Blanchet, Frank Haeseler
(Institut Français du Pétrole, FRANCE)
17:50 - 18:15 The Nature of Bonding to Black Carbon - A Re-
Evaluation of Risk of MGPs ....................... 80
Philip Mulvey
(University of Western Australia, AUSTRALIA)
SESSION III - NSO-Heterocycles and Cyanides
Chairman: John A. Ripp (GEI, USA)
14:00 - 14:25 Heterocyclic Aromatic Compounds: Assessment of
Substance Properties and Occurrence ............. 101
Thomas Held, Jens Blotevogel
(ARCADIS Consult GmbH, GERMANY)
14:25 - 14:50 NSO-Heterocyclic Compounds in Tar Oil
Contaminated Groundwater - Does Natural
Attenuation Take Place? ......................... 111
Anne-Kirsten Reineke, Jens Blotevogel, Thomas
Held, Juliane Hollender
(Eawag, SWITZERLAND)
14:50 - 15:15 Ecotoxicity Assessment and Biodegradation of
Heterocyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (NSO-HET) .... 112
Anne Saaner, Andreas Tiehm
(TZW, GERMANY)
15:15 - 15:40 Stable Carbon (12/13C) and Nitrogen (14/15N)
Isotopes as a Tool for Identifying the Sources
of Cyanide in Wastes and Contaminated Soils ..... 119
Tim Mansfeldt, Jenny Weihmann, Ulrike Schulte
(Universitat zu Koln, GERMANY)
15:40 - 16:10 COFFEE BREAK
SESSION IV - Permeable Reactive Barriers
Chairman: Andrew Coleman (EPRI, USA)
16:10 - 16:35 Permeable Reactive Barriers (PRBs) for Ground
Water Remediation at Contaminated Former
Manufactured Gasworks Plants (MGPs) and
Related Sites: Design Features, Performances
Achieved, and Outlook ........................... 123
Volker Birke, Christine Schuett, Harald
Burmeier, Ina Schlanges, Wolf-Ulrich Palm,
Wolfgang Ruck
(Leuphana University of Liineburg, GERMANY)
16:35 - 17:00 Remediation of a Former Gasworks by Funnel-
and-Gate; Experience After Three Years of
Operation ....................................... 124
Jörg Weindl, Siri Romboy, Michael Koch
(BFM Umwelt-Beratung-Forschung-Management GmbH,
GERMANY)
17:00 - 17:25 Use-Related Remediation of the Former Coking
Plant of Lauchhammer ............................. 134
Volker Jungk, Uwe Steinhuber, Reinhard
Herrmann, Gerd Fischer, Gabriele Fadtke,
Hans-Dieter Beerbalk
(ARCADIS Consult GmbH, GERMANY)
17:25 - 17:50 Passive NAPL Barrier Design and Construction .... 142
Margaret Carrillo-Sheridan, Keith White,
Joseph Molina, Tracy Blazicek,Christopher Ryan
(ARCADIS BBL, USA)
17:50 - 18:15 Pilot Test and Field Construction of a Funnel-
and-Gate Biobarrier at an Abandoned Tar
Factory Site .................................... 152
Andreas Tiehm, Axel Müller, Helmut Jacob,
Hermann Schad, Christian Weingran
(TZW, GERMANY)
18:30 - 19:30 POSTER SESSION
19:30 - 21:00 Conference Buffet
Thursday, March 6, 2008
08:30 - 09:00 KEYNOTE LECTURE
Remediation of Manufactured Gas Plant Sites
in the United States ............................ 160
John A. Ripp
(GEI, USA)
SESSION Va - Remediation (Part 1)
Chairman: Frank Haeseler (IFP, FRANCE)
09:00 - 09:25 MGP Groundwater Treatment: Evaluation of
Physical and Biological Treatment Methods
Including a Polishing Pond ...................... 171
Thomas Wirthensohn, Paul Schoeberl, Wilfried
Wittmann, Werner Fuchs
(University of Natural Resources and Applied
Life Sciences, AUSTRIA)
09:25 - 09:50 Oxygen-Enhanced Air Sparging for Remediation
of NAPL at a Former Manufactured Gas Plant ...... 180
Robert A. Ferree, Mark Klemmer, Geethani
Jayakody, Kevin Wilson, Roger Whiting
(ARCADIS, USA)
09:50 - 10:15 Equipment and Scale-Up Considerations for
In-Situ Solidification of MGP Sites ............. 191
Thomas Plante, Asbjorn Gustafson, Marcel Guay,
Kevin Corradino
(URS Corporation, USA)
10:15 - 10:45 COFFEE BREAK
SESSION Vb - Remediation (Part 2)
Chairman: Philip Mulvey (University of Western
Australia, AUSTRALIA)
10:45 - 11:10 Manufactured Gas Plant Site Remediation and
Redevelopment Using In-Situ Technologies ........ 201
Alfred P. Leuschner, Timothy Olean, Maribeth
McCormick, Edward Walsh
(ENSR, USA)
11:10 - 11:35 Treatment of a Polynuclear Aromatic
Hydrocarbon and Vinyl Chloride Contamination
by Ultraviolet Light, Ozone and Advanced
Oxidation Processes ............................. 210
Jutta Eggers, Dietrich Maier, Matthias Maier
(TZW, GERMANY)
11:35 — 12:00 Use of Thermal Conduction Heating for the
Remediation of DNAPL in Fractured Bedrock,
Site in Southeast, USA .......................... 220
John Bierschenk, John LaChance, Gorm Heron
(TerraTherm, USA)
12:00 - 12:25 Low Accessibility and Chemical Activity of
PAHs Explain Failed Bioremediation of an MGP
Site Soil ....................................... 222
Fredrik Reichenberg, Ulrich G. Karlson,
Philipp Mayer
(University of Aarhus, DENMARK)
12:25 - 12:50 Complete Decontamination of the Old Gasworks
Plant "Am Radeland, VAT/Gasworks" in Hamburg
and Waste Disposal .............................. 223
Carsten Meicht, Hartmut Born
(IMS Ingenieurgesellschaft mbH, GERMANY)
12:50 - 14:10 LUNCH BREAK
SESSION Vc - Remediation and Modelling (Part 3)
Chairman: Andreas Tiehm (TZW, GERMANY)
14:10 - 14:35 Management Framework for Coal Tar DNAPLS at
Manufactured Gas Plant (MGP) Sites .............. 237
Alessandro Battaglia, Andrew Coleman,
David Nakles
(ENSR, Italy)
14:35 - 15:00 Full-Scale In-Situ Chemical Oxidation
Treatment of MGP Sites .......................... 238
Dan Bryant, Stijn Haghebaert
(GCI, USA)
15:00 - 15:25 In-Situ Chemical Oxidation - A Proper
Technique to Remediate Former MGP Sites ......... 248
Wim Plaisier, Denny Schanze
(In-Situ Technieken, THE NETHERLANDS)
15:25 - 15:50 A Maximum Plume Length Estimate to Support
Contaminated Site Management .................... 249
Rudolf Liedl, Peter Dietrich, Peter Grathwohl
(Technische Universitat Dresden, GERMANY)
15:50 - 16:15 Process-Oriented Reactive Transport Modelling
of Heterocyclic Hydrocarbons at a Former
Gasworks Site in Southern Germany ............... 255
Maria Herold, Thomas Ptak, Henning Prommer,
Janek Greskowiak, Thomas Wendel, Peter
Grathwohl
(University of Gottingen, GERMANY)
16:15 - 16:45 FINAL DISCUSSIONS
16:45 - 19:00 PANOMETER DRESDEN (visit)
(www.asisi-factory.de)
Poster Session
1. Reactive Sediment Capping Pilot Study. Phase I:
Background and Conceptual Design .......................... 265
Nancy Gensky, David Bessingpas, Andrew Coleman,
Danny Reible, Jeffrey Clock
(ARCADIS, USA)
2. Excavation of MGP Residuals in Soil Adjacent to an
Active Railline and a Residential Community ............... 266
Mikel Pype, Barry Raus, Lindsay Guiliano, Kimm Perlin
(Jacques Whitford, USA)
3. Investigation of MGP Purifier Box Fill Along a Creek
Floodplain - Experiences with Ferric Ferrocyanide ......... 267
Katie Ehret. Bruce Middleman, Patrice Donahue,
Ben Henry
(Jacques Whitford, USA)
4. Remediation of a 3rd Party Owned MGP in an Active
Business Setting .......................................... 268
Bruce Middleman, Christine Jeffers, Michael Heffron,
Kimm Perlin
(Jacques Whitford, USA)
5. Dyes, Spies, and Manufactured Gas ......................... 269
Ben Foster
(LFR, USA)
6. Three New England Former Manufactured Gas Plant (MGP)
Sediment Remediation Project Sites: Environmental
Dredging and Capping Case Studies ......................... 270
James Beaver, Mark Mahoney, Kenneth E. Lento
(ARCADIS-US, USA)
7. Tarry Material: Assessing the Most Sustainable
Remediation Technology for a NE England Case Study ........ 271
Louise Cartwright, Paddy Daly, Philip Mulvey
(EESI Contracting, UK)
8. Impact and Importance of Heterocyclics in Remediation:
Adsorption on Activated Carbon ............................ 276
Jan Sebastian Mänz, Eric Naumann, Wolf-Ulrich Palm,
Wolfgang Ruck
(Leuphana University of Liineburg, GERMANY)
9. Analysis, Distribution and Fate of PAH, Polar PAH and
N.S.O-Heterocyclics in the Aquifer of Tar-Contaminated
Sites ..................................................... 277
Ina Schlanges, Jan Sebastian Mänz, Dietmar Meyer,
Wolf-Ulrich Palm, Wolfgang Ruck
(Leuphana University of Liineburg, GERMANY)
lO. Safety During Tar Ponds Remediation - Risks and
Integral Solutions ........................................ 278
Jochen Grossmann
(GICON, GERMANY)
11. Reactive Barters Used in the Protection of Aquatic
Echosystem ................................................ 279
Joan Bica, Alexandru Dimache, Nicolae Alboiu,
Iulian Iancu
(Technical University of Civil Engineering
Bucharest, ROMANIA)
12. REMOX®EC Stabilization Reagent Catalyzed Permanganate
for In-Situ Biogeochemical Stabilization of MGP
Constituents .............................................. 285
Jim Mueller, Joanna Moreno, Fayaz Lakhwala,
Alan Seech, Matt Dingens, Phil Vella
(The Adventus Group, USA)
13. Case Study of the Investigation and Remediation of an
MGP Site in New York City ................................. 287
Terry Taylor, Neil O'Halloran
(ARCADIS BBL, USA)
14. Ex-Situ Bioremediation of Grounds Contaminated with
Hydrocarbons .............................................. 288
Barbara Kotwzan, Kazimierz Grabas, Adam Pawelczyk,
Mieczyslaw Steininger
(WUT Wroclaw, POLAND)
15. The Susceptibility, Resistance, and Resilience of
Microorganisms in Soil and Groundwater to Chemical
Contaminants .............................................. 296
Zdenek Filip, Katerina Demnerova
(Institute of Chemical Technology, CZECH REPUBLIC)
16. Guidelines of NA Implementation at Tar Oil
Contaminated Sites ........................................ 299
Peter Börke, Norbert Hüsers, Peter Werner
(LfUG, GERMANY)
17. Mobilization of Aromatic Compounds from a Fresh Tar
Oil Source ................................................ 301
Stefan Schönekerl, Norbert Hüsers, Helmut Lorbeer,
Peter Werner
(Technische Universitat Dresden, GERMANY)
18. Investigation of Natural Degradation Processes in a Tar
Oil Contaminated Aquifer by the Means of an On-Site
Column Facility ........................................... 303
Stefan Schönekerl, Norbert Hüsers, Helmut Lorbeer,
Peter Werner, Carsten Leibenath
(Technische Universitat Dresden, GERMANY)
19. Remediation of Tar Ponds from the Point of View of the
Responsible Companies - Presentation of Approaches and
Problems Regarding the Implementation, Practical Examples
from the Day-by-Day Remediation Business .................. 304
Jochen Grossmann
(GICON, GERMANY)
20. Environmental Behaviour of Short Chain Alkyl Phenols ...... 305
Hans-Dieter Beerbalk, Peter Börke, Thomas Fichtner,
Norbert Hüsers, Carsten Leibenath, Holger Uibrig
(Buero Dr. Beerbalk, GERMANY)
21. Sediment Remediation in Urban Rivers at North American
Manufactured Gas Plant Sites .............................. 310
William Gregg
(ENSR/AECOM, USA)
22. Chemical Analysis of Cyanide in Surface Water Pitfalls,
Interferences, and False Positives ........................ 317
James R. Ash, Ray Siegener
(GEI Consultants, Inc., USA)
23. Needs for Research of Remediation of MGP Sites with
Regard to Limits of Natural Attenuation and Their
Related Risk Assessment Methods ........................... 318
Karl Rohrhofer, Paul Schöberl, Roland Rohrhofer
(Buero Rohrhofer & Partner-OEKOREAL-GWCC, AUSTRIA
24. TERQ (Transparent Toxicological Exposure Risk
Quantification) Site-Specific Health Risk Assessments
and Definition of Remediation Goals, Taking into
Account the Multiple Site Specific Pollutant Exposure
as Management Tool for Environmental & Health
Compliance and Investment Safety (M&A and Real Estate
Development) .............................................. 319
Frank Karg, Ulrike Hintzen
(HPC, GERMANY)
25. 0rganoclays Trap PNAH's and Creosote in Permeable
Barriers .................................................. 320
George R. Alther
(Biomin, USA)
26. The remediation of contaminated sites using
electrochemical methods ................................... 326
Irina Aura Oprea, Elisa Ferrarese, Gianni
Andreottola, Adrian Badea, Giuliano Ziglio,
Tiberiu Apostol
(University Politechnica, ROMANIA)
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