Laserfiche WebLink
R604 UPDATE 23 10-20-1993 <br /> Sampling Vapor Streams: <br /> The vapor samples are obtained by attaching a dedicated air tight <br /> soft polytubing to a sample port on the well side of the orifice <br /> plate on the vapor recovery manifold. The tubing is then <br /> connected to a tedlar bag placed inside a vacuum sampler The <br /> sample port is then opened and the vacuum placed on the tedlar <br /> bag from the sample vessel allows the tedlar bag to fill with the <br /> vapor stream from that particular sample port . Once the tedlar <br /> bag is full the valve is closed and the vacuum removed from the <br /> sample vessel . The tedlar bag contains an air tight locking <br /> septum valve which is then closed and locked to secure the vapor <br /> sample . A small dedicated needle attached to a dedicated 1 cc <br /> syringe is then inserted through the sample septum into the <br /> tedlar bag. The lcc syringe is purged numerous times before <br /> filling it with the sample . All but 0 . 5 cc of the sample is <br /> ejected from the syringe, into the air before injecting the <br /> remaining 0 . 5 cc syringe sample into the Shimadzu FID-GC (the <br /> calibrant infection is 0 . 5 cc) . Once the chromatogram is <br /> recorded, an instrument blank is run prior to the next sample. <br /> The analysis of the instrument blank will verify that no residual <br /> peaks are being carried onto the next analysis . <br /> Vacuum influence readings are obtained from the wells by <br /> attaching a manometer calibrated in mm water, to sample ports at <br /> the well heads . These readings show the mm water pressure or <br /> vacuum that is being created at each well . <br /> SUMMARY <br /> Estimates of petroleum hydrocarbons remaining in the soil after <br /> the confirmation soil sampling that occurred on July 20, 21, 22, <br /> 1992 was approximately 3027 pounds . Soil sample results from the <br /> SB4 confirmation sample boring and vapor samples from the vadose <br /> zone well P1 have indicated that the former northeastern pump <br /> island area and the surrounding area (AREA C) is now remediated <br /> of the contaminant The two remaining areas of impacted soil <br /> are AREA A - (SBS) the area beneath the former western pump <br /> island and AREA B (SB3 , SB9 and SB11) the area southeast of the <br /> former underground storage tanks . <br /> Vapor extraction has removed the lighter fractions of gasoline <br /> range hydrocarbons found in the soil and has greatly reduced the <br /> dissolved contaminant found in the ground water and the capillary <br /> fringe. Of the estimated 3027 pounds that remained in the soil <br /> after the July 22, 1992 sampling, 232 out of an estimated 72 <br /> pounds have been removed from AREA A (VSB5) and 3209 out of an <br /> estimated 2946 . 5 pounds have been removed from AREA B (MWS, VSB3, <br /> VSB9 and VSB11) This indicates that the majority of degraded <br /> gasoline range hydrocarbons has been removed from the soil and <br /> ground water at this site. Dual instruments, GC FID and GC PID, <br /> have confirmed that benzene is no longer a component of the vapor <br /> streams . <br /> Monitoring of the ground water indicates that contaminated ground <br /> water associated with MW1 and MW5 has been remediated and meets <br /> the Title 22 and DHS standards Ground water gradients, <br /> page 6 <br />