Heavy metal-organic pollutants compound pollution at industrial legacy sites and have caused damage to the ecological environment and human health during recent decades. In view of the difficulty and high cost of post-contamination remediation, it is worth studying, and practically applying, cutoff walls to reduce the spread of pollution in advance. In this study, field-scale studies were carried out at e-waste dismantling legacy sites in Taizhou, Zhejiang Province of China, through the process of site investigation, numerical simulation, and cutoff wall practical application. Firstly, the concentrations and spatial distributions of Pb, Cd and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and poly brominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) were identified in both soil and groundwater. Then, potential dispersal routes of key combined contaminants (Pb and PCBs) at the soil-groundwater interface were systematically studied through numerical simulation applying Visual MODFLOW-MT3DMS. One site was chosen to predict the barrier effect of differently sized cutoff walls based on the migration path of compound pollutants. A protocol for a cutoff wall (50 m length x 2 m width x 3 m height) was finally verified and applied at the real contaminated site for the blocking of compound pollutant diffusion. Further, the groundwater quality of the contaminated site was monitored consecutively for six months to ensure the durability and stability of barrier measures. All pollutant indicators, including for Pb and PCB complex pollutants, were reduced to below the national Grade IV groundwater standard value, achieving environmental standards at these polluted sites and providing possibilities for land reuse. In summary, this field-scale test provided new ideas for designing cutoff walls to block the diffusion of complex pollutants; it also laid a basis for the practical application of cutoff walls in pollution prevention and control of complex contaminated sites and for soil-groundwater environmental protection at industrial heritage sites.
In this article, a one-dimensional non-isothermal diffusion model for organic pollutant in an unsaturated composite liner (comprising a geomembrane and an unsaturated compacted clay liner (CCL)) considering the degradation effect is established, which also includes the impacts of temperature on diffusion-related parameters, and employs a water content and pore-water pressure head relationship equation that better matches the experimental results. Subsequently, this model is addressed through a finite-difference technique, and its reasonableness is proved by comparing with the experiment measurements and two other calculation approaches. Following this, the analyses suggest that the diffusion coefficients' change induced by a rising temperature accelerates the diffusion rate, whereas such an alteration on partitioning coefficients has an opposite effect. Furthermore, the evaluation reveals that the non-isothermal state caused by an increasing upper temperature overall lowers the anti-fouling performance. The unsaturated composite liner's barrier function is weakened by an increment in residual water content of CCL, but enhanced by unsaturated layer thickness. It is also detected that the degradation effect should be considered if the degradation half-life <= 100 years. Lastly, a simplified approach for assessing the unsaturated composite liner's barrier performance is presented, which can provide guidance for its engineering design in a non-isothermal scenario.