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Induced Polarization Signatures at Former Fire Training Areas Contaminated with Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF)

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  • Overview
The release of PFAS containing aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) constituents from former firefighting training areas leads to soil and groundwater contamination, threatening human health and the environment. Non-invasive field methods are needed to effectively characterize soil PFAS concentrations and textural variations, specifically soil surface area, and to model long-term PFAS leaching from these source zones. Geophysical methods, such as induced polarization (IP), can characterize the electrical properties of the subsurface. Preliminary research suggests that IP has the potential to detect variations in sorbed AFFF constituents. However, IP is also sensitive to soil texture (e.g., surface area) and textural heterogeneities at field sites, which may mask signals from sorbed AFFF constituents. This study investigated the contributions of AFFF contamination versus soil surface area to IP signals observed across two former firefighting training areas. Samples were collected to assess the statistical significance of IP sensitivity in distinguishing AFFF sorption from soil surface area variations through laboratory analysis. Although our IP measurements could not map spatial variations in soil PFAS concentrations at these sites, the ability to image field-scale surface area highlights the potential importance and utility of geophysics in understanding PFAS leaching from contaminated source zones.

Impact/Purpose

An understanding of the spatial distribution of aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) source zones resulting from former fire training activities is required to assess the concentrations of contaminants, such as per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), and to support remediation of AFFF-impacted sites.  Techniques are needed to map the AFFF source zones using minimally intrusive surface instruments, which include most geophysical methods such as spectral induced polarization (SIP).  Our findings indicate that AFFF constituents associated with the soil grain surface are unlikely to exhibit a direct correlation with soil PFAS concentration in disturbed or remediated sites where heterogeneous soil physical properties likely dominate the SIP response.  These findings will guide the potential application of SIP at AFFF sites of variable geologic conditions.

Citation

Avelar, A., D. Ntarlagiannis, C. Schaefer, Dale Werkema, AND L. Slater. Induced Polarization Signatures at Former Fire Training Areas Contaminated with Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF). Waste Management 2025 Symposia - Empowering a Sustainable Future, Phoenix, AZ, March 09 - 13, 2025.
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Last updated on April 02, 2025
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