September 30, 2018
Report

Biological System Characterization to Address Biofouling of the 200 West Pump-and-Treat Injection Wells

Contaminated groundwater in the 200W Area of the Hanford Site is being treated ex situ by the 200W Pump-and-Treat (P&T) Facility and the subsurface plume is under hydraulic containment. The 200W P&T Facility removes several contaminants of concern from groundwater, as well as nitrate. Facility capacity is constrained by biofouling of injection wells, which limits the ability to efficiently inject treated effluent water in to the subsurface. In a previous report, Thomle et al. provided a comprehensive engineering assessment of biofouling at the 200W P&T Facility. In that report, both operational changes and facility modifications were recommended to help mitigate the symptoms and consequences of biofouling by expanding treatment processes in the plant. The 200W P&T Facility’s fluidized bed reactor (FBR) is a biological treatment system that has been identified as a principal source of biofouling. Carbon and nutrient inputs to the FBR are needed to sustain high rates of activity, but can also be responsible for microbial proliferation in the effluent water distribution pipeline, and loss injection well capacity. The primary objective of this work was to fill critical knowledge gaps associated with the FBR that can be used to optimize the biological system for continuous operation and sustained performance.

Revised: December 26, 2018 | Published: September 30, 2018

Bagwell C.E., D.L. Saunders, J.W. Morad, J.R. Wells, and K.C. Johnson. 2018. Biological System Characterization to Address Biofouling of the 200 West Pump-and-Treat Injection Wells. PNNL-28021. Richland, WA: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.