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New Evaluation Scheme for Two-Dimensional Isotope Analysis to Decipher Biodegradation Processes: Application to Groundwater Contamination by MTBEZwank, L., M. Berg, M. Elsner, T.C. Schmidt, R.P. Schwarzenbach and S.B. Haderlein, Environmental Science & Technology, 2005, 39 (4), 1018-1029. [W. Giger]
Compound-specific analysis of stable carbon and hydrogen isotopes was
used to assess the fate of the gasoline additive methyl tert-butyl
ether (MTBE) and its major degradation product tert-butyl alcohol (TBA)
in a groundwater plume at an industrial disposal site. We present a
novel approach to evaluate two-dimensional compound-specific isotope
data with the potential to identify reaction mechanisms and to quantify
the extent of biodegradation at complex field sites. Due to the
widespread contaminant plume, multiple MTBE sources, the presence of
numerous other organic pollutants, and the complex biogeochemical and
hydrological regime at the site, a traditional mass balance approach
was not applicable. The isotopic composition of MTBE steadily changed
from the source regions along the major contaminant plume (-26.4 parts
per thousand to +40.0 parts per thousand (carbon); -73.1 parts per
thousand to +60.3 parts per thousand (hydrogen)) indicating substantial
biodegradation. Constant carbon isotopic signatures of TBA suggest the
absence of TBA degradation at the site. Published carbon and hydrogen
isotope fractionation data for biodegradation of MTBE under oxic and
anoxic conditions, respectively, were examined and used to determine
both the nature and the extent of in-situ biodegradation along the
plume(s). The coupled evaluation of two-dimensional compound-specific
isotope data explained both carbon and hydrogen fractionation data in a
consistent way and indicate anaerobic biodegradation of MTBE along the
entire plume. A novel scheme to reevaluate empiric isotopic enrichment
factors (E) in terms of theoretically based intrinsic carbon
((12)k/(13)k) and hydrogen ((1)k/(2)k) kinetic isotope effects (KIE) is
presented. Carbon and hydrogen KIE values, calculated for different
potential reaction mechanisms, imply that anaerobic biodegradation of
MTBE follows a S(N)2-type reaction mechanism. Furthermore, our data
suggest that additional removal process(es) such as evaporation
contributed to the overall MTBE removal along the plume, a phenomenon
that might be significant also for other field sites at tropic or
subtropic climates with elevated groundwater temperatures (25 degreesC). |
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