Authors
Kenneth H Williams, Andreas Kemna, Michael J Wilkins, Jennifer Druhan, Evan Arntzen, A Lucie N’Guessan, Philip E Long, Susan S Hubbard, Jillian F Banfield
Publication date
2009/9/1
Journal
Environmental science & technology
Volume
43
Issue
17
Pages
6717-6723
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Description
Understanding how microorganisms alter their physical and chemical environment during bioremediation is hindered by our inability to resolve subsurface microbial activity with high spatial resolution. Here we demonstrate the use of a minimally invasive geophysical technique to monitor stimulated microbial activity during acetate amendment in an aquifer near Rifle, Colorado. During electrical induced polarization (IP) measurements, spatiotemporal variations in the phase response between imposed electric current and the resultant electric field correlated with changes in groundwater geochemistry accompanying stimulated iron and sulfate reduction and sulfide mineral precipitation. The magnitude of the phase response varied with measurement frequency (0.125 and 1 Hz) and was dependent upon the dominant metabolic process. The spectral effect was corroborated using a biostimulated column experiment …
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