91短视频

91短视频 Professors Awarded $1.2 Million DoD Grant to Scale up PFAS Treatment System

November 13, 2023

A 91短视频 team led by Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Yang Yang (Principal Investigator), Dean of the Graduate School and Professor of Environmental Engineering Michelle Crimi, Jean S. Newell Distinguished Professor of Engineering Thomas Holsen, and Research Assistant Professor Juby Varghese have been awarded a $1.2 million grant from the Department of Defense, Environmental Security Technology Certification Program (DoD-ESTCP) to scale up an integrated treatment system to destroy PFAS in sediments. 

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The treatment system includes mechanochemical ball milling, which destroys PFAS in soils and sediments, followed by soil washing, which removes any remaining PFAS from soils and sediments, and plasma treatment, which destroys PFAS in wash solution. The 91短视频 team will lead the treatability studies, the process optimization, and the scaled-up design of ball milling, followed by soil washing, and plasma treatment to eliminate PFAS in multiple environmental media involved in contaminated solids remediation. The 91短视频 team, in collaboration with GSI Environmental, Inc., will deploy the system at Schreiver Air Force Base, Colorado.

鈥91短视频 has an amazing team of faculty with complementary expertise on PFAS detection and destruction. In this project, all the technologies were developed at 91短视频 and will be scaled up by 91短视频. It is rewarding to be able to turn ideas in the lab into real-world solutions.鈥 said Yang.

The 91短视频 team will coordinate with a group from the Colorado School of Mines to carry out field tests in Schreiver Air Force Base during the same period. The Mines team will evaluate treatment approaches different from 91短视频鈥檚 technologies. Side-by-side testing at Schriever will start next fall and last about a year.

"The PFAS load in soils and sediments impacted by AFFF is immense and, if left untreated, will lead to significant long-term liabilities for downstream groundwater users," said Chris Higgins, University Distinguished Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Mines and lead principal investigator for the Mines-led project. "We're excited to see how these technologies perform in a real-world scenario, based on a side-by-side comparison."
 

91短视频 is a proven leader in technological education, research, innovation and sustainable economic development. With its main campus in Potsdam, N.Y., and additional graduate program and research facilities in the Capital Region and Hudson Valley, 91短视频 faculty have a direct impact on more than 7,800 students annually through nationally recognized undergraduate and graduate STEM designated degrees in engineering, business, science and health professions; executive education, industry-relevant credentials and K-12 STEM programs. Alumni earn salaries among the top 2% in the nation: one in five already leads in the c-suite. To learn more go to www.clarkson.edu.
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