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ADVISORY- ACTIVE SOIL GAS INVESTIGATIONS <br />adjacent to the probe to evaluate soil column and probe construction breakthrough. The <br />leak check compound selected should not be a suspected site-specific contaminant. <br />Seal integrity is confirmed by analyzing the soil gas sample for the tracer compound. <br />Alternatively, each connection can be individually checked by placing the tracer cloth in <br />a plastic bag and then using the bag to enclose individual connections. Instruments can <br />be used in the field to evaluate whether leakage is occurring rather than waiting for the <br />mobile or stationary laboratory results. Liquid leak check compounds should be included <br />in the laboratory analyte list. The laboratory reports should quantify and annotate all <br />detections of the leak check compound at the reporting limit of the target analytes. If the <br />concentration of the leak check compound is greater than or equal to 10 times the <br />reporting limit for the target analyte(s), then corrective action is necessary as discussed <br />below. <br />4.2.2.2 LEAK CHECK COMPOUNDS (GASEOUS) <br />Gaseous tracer compounds, such as helium and sulfur hexafluoride, can be used along <br />with a shroud or tent placed over all the sampling equipment. Other compounds not <br />listed here may also be appropriate. Procedures for conducting a quantitative leak test <br />are described in Appendix C. An ambient air leak up to 5 percent is acceptable if <br />quantitative tracer testing is performed by shrouding. <br />4.2.2.3 LEAK CHECK CONSIDERATIONS <br />A soil gas well should be decommissioned if the leak cannot be corrected. Replacement <br />soil gas wells should be installed at least five feet from the location where the original <br />soil gas well was decommissioned due to a confirmed leak. The leak check compound <br />concentrations detected in the soil gas samples should be included in the laboratory <br />report and the ambient air breakthrough should be discussed in the site characterization <br />report. <br />The intent of the leak check compound is to enhance the integrity of the soil gas sample <br />by demonstrating that minimal or no ambient air breakthrough during sampling is <br />occurring. Although it is preferable not to have any tracer gas breakthrough, minor <br />amounts of breakthrough may be acceptable if the breakthrough is appropriate for the <br />site's DQ0s. Detecting leak check compounds indicate potential field problems. Some <br />potential sources of leaks in sampling trains are poor quality fittings, stripped, over <br />tightened, dirty or worn threads, and excessive sampling train connections. Regardless <br />of the cause of the leak, a data adjustment factor based upon the concentration of the <br />leak check compound to compensate for the inability to collect representative samples <br />is inappropriate. <br />Note that if a passivated stainless steel canister is used to collect a sample that is later <br />analyzed at a stationary laboratory and there is a significant leak, it will typically not be <br />identified until after demobilization of the field crew. Therefore, field screening prior to <br />laboratory analysis is recommended. <br />Commercially available leak check compounds, both liquid and gaseous, may contain <br />unanticipated impurities. Therefore, laboratories should analyze the leak check <br />compound to aid in the interpretation of the data. <br />July 2015 22