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In addition, a tremendous amount of
groundwater is used for industrial processes, production, and cooling.
So, if the quality of the water is degraded, or contaminated with
hazardous chemicals every other American on the street is potentially at
risk. That is no trivial concern. Not only is this a concern in urban
and suburban areas, where industrial contamination is prevalent, but it
is also a concern in our rural farming communities. The rural
communities are where chemical fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides
often contaminate the only available drinking water supply. Two movies
produced by Hollywood over the last few years [Erin Brockovitch
starring Julia Roberts (Universal Studios) and A Civil Action
starring John Travolta (Touchstone/Paramount Pictures)] have helped to
raise the level of awareness regarding the threat of groundwater
contamination to the average family and neighborhood. Both films are
based on true stories. In Erin Brockovitch improper disposal of
cooling tower water containing hexavalent chromium contaminated
residential wells which resulted in dozens of residents being stricken
with serious malignancies, some resulting in loss of life. In the film
A Civil Action improper dumping of Trichloroethene (TCE) and
other volatile organic solvents led to contamination of municipal
drinking water wells and resulted in increased incidence of malignancies
and leukemia, and again, loss of life, eight of them children. Do you
want your children to drink that water? It gets personal when placed in
these terms.
What Is Direct Push (DP)?
Now we know why groundwater monitoring is important; it enables us to
detect contaminated groundwater that may be a threat to the health and
welfare of our loved ones, friends, and neighbors. So what is 'direct
push' and what is its significance here? Direct push (DP) is an
alternative method to conventional drilling techniques for sampling soil and
groundwater, and installing monitoring wells in unconsolidated materials
such as clay, silt, sand, and gravel. Many sites where groundwater is
contaminated are located over aquifers of unconsolidated sands and
gravels. DP methods do not use rotary augering to advance tools or
install wells as conventional drilling methods do. DP methods use
percussion hammers and static vehicle weight combined with hydraulic
cylinders to advance tools to depth. The DP methods do not generate a
large volume of potentially contaminated drill cuttings as conventional
drilling methods do. This means that the field investigators and local
residents are less likely to be exposed to contaminated media. The waste
cuttings generated by conventional drilling usually have to be shoveled
into drums, the drums are sampled for analysis, and if contaminated, the
drummed cuttings must be shipped off for proper disposal. Costs for
handling and disposal of these wastes often consume 25 percent to 50
percent of the investigation budget. Since these waste cuttings are not
generated by DP methods, these costs are not incurred. Studies by the
EPA (1998) and state agencies (Florida DEP, 1997) found that when DP
methods were used the funds usually allocated for handling and disposal
of these wastes may be used for better characterization of the site, or
simply realized as savings and cost reduction. This is only one of the
advantages of DP investigation methods.
Direct push methods for soil and
groundwater sampling have been in use for ten years or more. These
methods are widely accepted in all 50 states for RCRA, CERCLA, UST,
(Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, Comprehensive Environmental
Response Compensation and Liability Act [Superfund], Underground Storage
Tank) and Brownfields site assessments and investigations (Applegate et
al. 1997; Thorton et al. 1997; EPA 1997,1998). The American Society of
Testing and Materials (ASTM) D18 Subcommittee on Direct Push Sampling
(D18.21.01) has developed and published a Standard Guide for both soil
sampling (D 6282) and groundwater sampling (D 6001) using direct push
methods. In the last several years many state agencies have begun to
accept and integrate these direct push soil and groundwater sampling
methods into their regulatory frame work. More recently the equipment
and procedures to install monitoring wells with DP methods have been
developed. Are these new DP procedures for monitoring well installation
being accepted in the industry? And what is the difference between a
monitoring well and a groundwater sampler? Let's address the latter
question first and then get back to the acceptance of the technology.
Groundwater Samplers vs. Monitoring
Wells
One thing that is confusing for many people when they are first
introduced to DP sampling methods is the distinction between a temporary
groundwater sampling tool and a monitoring well installed by DP methods.
The DP installed temporary groundwater sampling tools have been used for over ten years to conduct groundwater
assessments during environmental investigations. These temporary
groundwater samplers provide an efficient and cost effective means to
define the vertical and lateral extent of groundwater contamination
without the expense of installing permanent monitoring wells. These
devices are advanced to depth, a groundwater sample is collected, and
the sampler is retrieved and decontaminated. These tools are designed so
that the installation, sampling, and retrieval process often requires
less than an hour, and once decontaminated, the device may be used again
and again. This DP capability significantly lowers the cost of a
groundwater investigation, often by more than 50 percent when compared
to conventional drilling and installation of permanent monitoring wells
previously used for these investigations (EPA 1998).
But, you ask, what about monitoring
contaminated groundwater over a long period of time? You need to
determine if the contamination is persistent, increasing in
concentration, spreading to potential receptors (you or me?), or
decreasing in concentration due to natural attenuation or an engineered
remedial system. Now you need monitoring wells that can remain in place
and provide representative samples on a regular basis, often for ten or
more years. Do you have to resort to the less efficient, more hazardous
and costly conventional drilling methods to install these monitoring
wells? Do you need a two-inch or four-inch diameter well to collect two
40-milliliter vials for sample analysis? No. Direct push methods are
available for installing small diameter (0.5 to 1.5-inch ID) high
integrity monitoring wells in unconsolidated formations. Depending on the transmissivity of the formation
screened the DP wells can yield more than a liter of water per minute
for sampling. These small diameter wells are also ideal for use when
following the EPA's stringent "Low-Flow" sampling protocol (EPA 1996) to
obtain high integrity samples. The new ASTM Standard Guide (D 6724)
outlines several options to install monitoring wells for environmental
water quality sampling. More detailed information is provided in the
ASTM Standard Practice (D 6725) for installing monitoring wells with
prepacked screens. The use of prepacked screens with the smaller diameter DP
tools makes well installation easier and more rapid. The prepacked
screens also assure the integrity and placement of the filter media
during well construction providing confidence that low turbidity,
representative samples will be obtained. Furthermore, the equipment and
methods for tremie grouting the small annulus of the DP tooling has been
developed so that high integrity well seals and annular grout prevent
movement of contaminants down hole and alleviate concerns of potential
cross contamination.
Technology Verification and Acceptance
Many regulatory agencies, consultants, and facility owners are reluctant
to use a new technology or method. They are concerned about a new
technology's ability to provide representative samples, regulatory
acceptance, and legal defensibility (the inevitable). Some initial field
studies conducted to determine if DP installed wells provide
representative samples comparable to those recovered from conventionally
installed monitoring wells. Two of these early studies (McCall et al.
1997, McCall 2000) report that the DP prepacked screen monitoring wells
provide equivalent samples for several analytes. The analytes studied in
the comparisons included chlorinated volatile organic compounds, hexavalent chromium, and major element cations. These studies found no statistically significant difference
between the paired DP and conventional wells for the analytes
investigated. Additional studies comparing DP and conventionally
installed monitoring wells are currently being conducted by the
Department of Defense. The DOD studies are being conducted at Port
Hueneme, California; Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida; the Cold Regions
Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL) in New Hampshire; and at
least two other facilities. The study being conducted at Port Hueneme
has focused on the gasoline additive, methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE).
The preliminary report from this study (Kram et al. 2000) found no
statistically significant difference between the performance of the DP
installed and conventionally installed monitoring wells.
So, what about acceptance of the new DP
methods for installing monitoring wells? Are state regulatory agencies
and the U.S. EPA embracing these new methods? Simply stated, yes. One
recent example is the Oregon Water Resources Department. See their
Administrative Rules Chapter 690, Division 240, Well Construction
Standards, for an example of updated regulations that embrace this new
technology (http://www.wrd.state.or.us/publication/notices/new_oars/Div
%20240%20-%20Monitoring.htm). The new, and soon to be published ASTM
Standard Guide (D 6724) and Standard Practice (D 6725) for installation
of direct push monitoring wells should facilitate broader acceptance of
the DP well installation technology for groundwater monitoring. Because
of the recently enacted Public Law (No. 104-113) federal agencies (such
as the EPA) accept and adopt technical standards developed by voluntary
consensus standards organizations such as ASTM. Information on this
topic is available from the Office of Management and Budget in Circular
No. A-119 entitled "Federal Participation in the Development and Use of
Voluntary Consensus Standards".
Hydraulic Conductivity Too!
Monitoring wells also are used to obtain another essential piece of
information about the aquifer or formation under investigation. The
monitoring wells are used to determine the formation hydraulic
conductivity by conducting pump tests or slug tests. Hydraulic
conductivity (K) measurements allow calculation of the rate that
groundwater (and so contaminants) can flow through the formation. If the
groundwater and contaminants move quickly enough they may reach a water
supply well before they are degraded by natural attenuation and so pose
a significant health risk to the local family or community.
Can direct push installed wells and
groundwater samplers be used to determine the formation hydraulic
conductivity? Recently published research (Butler et al. 2002, Butler
2002, McCall et al. 2002) has found that the small diameter DP installed
devices can provide an accurate determination of the formation hydraulic
conductivity when appropriate methods are used.
Data on K is used in risk based modeling (RBCA) and to determine
if Monitored Natural Attenuation (MNA) is an acceptable remedial
alternative. Additionally, data on K is essential so that groundwater
remedial systems can be correctly designed.
Summary
Now you know that "direct push" is an alternative method to conventional
drilling for collection of soil and groundwater samples and the
installation of monitoring wells in unconsolidated materials such as
clay, silt, sand, and gravel. Also, direct push is time and cost
effective and minimizes the generation of hazardous wastes during
environmental investigations. To summarize, why would you want to
install smaller diameter monitoring wells using direct push methods?
ˇ Save time and money
ˇ Obtain representative samples
ˇ Minimize waste generation and exposure hazards
ˇ Obtain data required by regulation to meet monitoring, investigation,
remediation, and closure requirements
ˇ Obtain information on formation hydraulic conductivity needed for RBCA/MNA
and remedial action design.
And don't forget to follow the recently
published ASTM Guide (D 6724) and Practice (D 6725) for direct push well
installation to assure the quality of well construction and groundwater
sample integrity. Let's monitor our valuable groundwater resources and
protect our families and neighbors more effectively using smarter
methods. |