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Compound specific isotope analysis (CSIA) usually refers to the measurement of the [[wikipedia: Stable isotope ratio | isotope ratios]] (typically, the stable isotope ratios of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur or chlorine) of individual volatile and semi-volatile compounds extracted from complex environmental mixtures. These compounds (or their derivatization products) are generally separable by conventional gas or liquid chromatography and amenable to high-temperature oxidation or pyrolysis to produce simple gases (H<sub>2</sub>, CO<sub>2</sub>, CO, N<sub>2</sub>, O<sub>2</sub>, SO<sub>2</sub>, CH<sub>3</sub>Cl) suitable for analysis by a gas-source isotope-ratio mass spectrometer. The CSIA methodology provides a quantitative means to differentiate reaction pathways for abiotic and biotic degradation, including different pathways of biodegradation, and may serve as a basis for identification of distinct pollutant sources. CSIA can also provide a powerful line of evidence for monitored natural attenuation of sites contaminated with a wide variety of common organic pollutants including petroleum hydrocarbons, fuel oxygenates, BTEX, chlorinated solvents, and nitroaromatics.
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The heterogeneous distribution of munitions constituents, released as particles from munitions firing and detonations on military training ranges, presents challenges for representative soil sample collection and for defensible decision making. Military range characterization studies and the development of the incremental sampling methodology (ISM) have enabled the development of recommended methods for soil sampling that produce representative and reproducible concentration data for munitions constituents. This article provides a broad overview of recommended soil sampling and processing practices for analysis of munitions constituents on military ranges.  
 
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'''Related Article(s)''':  
 
'''Related Article(s)''':  
  
*[[Molecular Biological Tools - MBTs]]
 
  
 
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'''CONTRIBUTOR(S):''' [[Dr. Samuel Beal]]
'''CONTRIBUTOR(S):''' [[Dr. Barbara Sherwood Lollar, F.R.S.C.]]
 
  
  
 
'''Key Resource(s)''':  
 
'''Key Resource(s)''':  
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*[[media:Taylor-2011 ERDC-CRREL TR-11-15.pdf| Guidance for Soil Sampling of Energetics and Metals]]<ref name= "Taylor2011">Taylor, S., Jenkins, T.F., Bigl, S., Hewitt, A.D., Walsh, M.E. and Walsh, M.R., 2011. Guidance for Soil Sampling for Energetics and Metals (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-11-15). [[media:Taylor-2011 ERDC-CRREL TR-11-15.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>
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*[[Media:Hewitt-2009 ERDC-CRREL TR-09-6.pdf| Report.pdf | Validation of Sampling Protocol and the Promulgation of Method Modifications for the Characterization of Energetic Residues on Military Testing and Training Ranges]]<ref name= "Hewitt2009">Hewitt, A.D., Jenkins, T.F., Walsh, M.E., Bigl, S.R. and Brochu, S., 2009. Validation of sampling protocol and the promulgation of method modifications for the characterization of energetic residues on military testing and training ranges (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-09-6). Engineer Research and Development Center / Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab (ERDC/CRREL) TR-09-6, Hanover, NH, USA. [[Media:Hewitt-2009 ERDC-CRREL TR-09-6.pdf | Report.pdf]]</ref>
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*[[media:Epa-2006-method-8330b.pdf| U.S. EPA SW-846 Method 8330B: Nitroaromatics, Nitramines, and Nitrate Esters by High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC)]]<ref name= "USEPA2006M">U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA), 2006. Method 8330B (SW-846): Nitroaromatics, Nitramines, and Nitrate Esters by High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC), Rev. 2. Washington, D.C. [[media:Epa-2006-method-8330b.pdf | Report.pdf]]</ref>
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*[[media:Epa-2007-method-8095.pdf | U.S. EPA SW-846 Method 8095: Explosives by Gas Chromatography.]]<ref name= "USEPA2007M">U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA), 2007. Method 8095 (SW-846): Explosives by Gas Chromatography. Washington, D.C. [[media:Epa-2007-method-8095.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>
  
*[//www.enviro.wiki/images/a/a9/Hunkeler-2008-A_Guide.pdf A Consensus Guide For Assessing Biodegradation and Source Identification Of Organic Contaminants In Groundwater Using Compound Specific Stable Isotope Analysis (CSIA)]<ref name="Hunkeler2008">Hunkeler, D., Meckenstock, R. U., Sherwood Lollar, B., Schmidt, T. C. and Wilson, J. T., 2008. A Guide for Assessing Biodegradation and Source Identification of Organic Groundwater Contaminants Using Compound Specific Isotope Analysis (CSIA). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/R-08/148. [//www.enviro.wiki/images/a/a9/Hunkeler-2008-A_Guide.pdf Report pdf]</ref>
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==Introduction==
*[https://doi.org/10.1039/c0em00277a Stable Isotope Fractionation to Investigate Natural Transformation Mechanisms of Organic Contaminants: Principles, Prospects and Limitations]<ref name= "Elsner2010.2">Elsner, M., 2010. Stable isotope fractionation to investigate natural transformation mechanisms of organic contaminants: principles, prospects and limitations. Journal of Environmental Monitoring, 12(11), pp.2005-2031. [https://doi.org/10.1039/c0em00277a doi: 10.1039/C0EM00277A]</ref>
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[[File:Beal1w2 Fig1.png|thumb|200 px|left|Figure 1: Downrange distance of visible propellant plume on snow from the firing of different munitions. Note deposition behind firing line for the 84-mm rocket. Data from: Walsh et al.<ref>Walsh, M.R., Walsh, M.E., Ampleman, G., Thiboutot, S., Brochu, S. and Jenkins, T.F., 2012. Munitions propellants residue deposition rates on military training ranges. Propellants, Explosives, Pyrotechnics, 37(4), pp.393-406. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/prep.201100105 doi: 10.1002/prep.201100105]</ref><ref>Walsh, M.R., Walsh, M.E., Hewitt, A.D., Collins, C.M., Bigl, S.R., Gagnon, K., Ampleman, G., Thiboutot, S., Poulin, I. and Brochu, S., 2010. Characterization and Fate of Gun and Rocket Propellant Residues on Testing and Training Ranges: Interim Report 2. (ERDC/CRREL TR-10-13Also: ESTCP Project ER-1481)  [[media:Walsh-2010 ERDC-CRREL TR-11-15 ESTCP ER-1481.pdf| Report]]</ref>]]
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[[File:Beal1w2 Fig2.png|thumb|left|200 px|Figure 2: A low-order detonation mortar round (top) with surrounding discrete soil samples produced concentrations spanning six orders of magnitude within a 10m by 10m area (bottom). (Photo and data: A.D. Hewitt)]]
  
==Introduction==
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Munitions constituents are released on military testing and training ranges through several common mechanisms. Some are locally dispersed as solid particles from incomplete combustion during firing and detonation. Also, small residual particles containing propellant compounds (e.g., [[Wikipedia: Nitroglycerin | nitroglycerin [NG]]] and [[Wikipedia: 2,4-Dinitrotoluene | 2,4-dinitrotoluene [2,4-DNT]]]) are distributed in front of and surrounding target practice firing lines (Figure 1). At impact areas and demolition areas, high order detonations typically yield very small amounts (<1 to 10 mg/round) of residual high explosive compounds (e.g., [[Wikipedia: TNT | TNT ]], [[Wikipedia: RDX | RDX ]] and [[Wikipedia: HMX | HMX ]]) that are distributed up to and sometimes greater than) 24 m from the site of detonation<ref name= "Walsh2017">Walsh, M.R., Temple, T., Bigl, M.F., Tshabalala, S.F., Mai, N. and Ladyman, M., 2017. Investigation of Energetic Particle Distribution from High‐Order Detonations of Munitions. Propellants, Explosives, Pyrotechnics, 42(8), pp.932-941. [https://doi.org/10.1002/prep.201700089 doi: 10.1002/prep.201700089] [[media: Walsh-2017-High-Order-Detonation-Residues-Particle-Distribution-PEP.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>.
Compound Specific Isotope Analysis (CSIA) refers to the measurement of the [[wikipedia: Stable isotope ratio | isotope ratios]] (typically carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur or chlorine) of individual organic compounds extracted from complex environmental mixtures. The approach was developed initially during the post-WWII era for application to [[wikipedia: Source rock | source rock]] identification and [[wikipedia: Hydrocarbon exploration | hydrocarbon exploration]], and remains a foundation of the oil and gas industry. In the 1980s, [[wikipedia: John M. Hayes (scientist) | John M. Hayes]] at Indiana University Bloomington and collaborators<ref>Merritt, D.A., Brand, W.A. and Hayes, J.M., 1994. Isotope-ratio-monitoring gas chromatography-mass spectrometry: methods for isotopic calibration. Organic Geochemistry, 21(6-7), 573-583. [https://doi.org/10.1016/0146-6380(94)90003-5 doi: 10.1016/0146-6380(94)90003-5]</ref><ref>Brand, W.A., 1996. High precision isotope ratio monitoring techniques in mass spectrometry. Journal of Mass Spectrometry, 31(3), 225-235. [https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1096-9888(199603)31:3 <225::aid-jms319>3.0.co;2-l doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-9888(199603)31:3<225::AID-JMS319>3.0.CO;2-L]</ref> introduced the era of continuous flow compound-specific mass spectrometry by interfacing a gas chromatograph via a sample preparatory oxidation system to a stable [[wikipedia:Isotope-ratio mass spectrometry | isotope ratio mass spectrometry]] system, which lowered detection limits by up to 5 orders of magnitude and reduced analytical and sample preparation time. This continuous flow technique allowed CSIA to become widely applied by providing the ability, with instrumentation that became commercially available around 1990, to measure and compare stable isotope ratios for compounds of environmental concern at various spatiotemporal scales in [[wikipedia: Environmental chemistry | environmental chemistry]], [[wikipedia: Biogeochemistry | biogeochemistry]], and contaminant [[wikipedia: Hydrogeology | hydrogeology]].
 
  
==The CSIA Method==
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Low-order detonations and duds are thought to be the primary source of munitions constituents on ranges<ref>Hewitt, A.D., Jenkins, T.F., Walsh, M.E., Walsh, M.R. and Taylor, S., 2005. RDX and TNT residues from live-fire and blow-in-place detonations. Chemosphere, 61(6), pp.888-894. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2005.04.058 doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2005.04.058]</ref><ref>Walsh, M.R., Walsh, M.E., Poulin, I., Taylor, S. and Douglas, T.A., 2011. Energetic residues from the detonation of common US ordnance. International Journal of Energetic Materials and Chemical Propulsion, 10(2). [https://doi.org/10.1615/intjenergeticmaterialschemprop.2012004956 doi: 10.1615/IntJEnergeticMaterialsChemProp.2012004956] [[media:Walsh-2011-Energetic-Residues-Common-US-Ordnance.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>. Duds are initially intact but may become perforated or fragmented into micrometer to centimeter;o0i0k-sized particles by nearby detonations<ref>Walsh, M.R., Thiboutot, S., Walsh, M.E., Ampleman, G., Martel, R., Poulin, I. and Taylor, S., 2011. Characterization and fate of gun and rocket propellant residues on testing and training ranges (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-11-13). Engineer Research and Development Center / Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab (ERDC/CRREL) TR-11-13, Hanover, NH, USA. [[media:Epa-2006-method-8330b.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>. Low-order detonations can scatter micrometer to centimeter-sized particles up to 20 m from the site of detonation<ref name= "Taylor2004">Taylor, S., Hewitt, A., Lever, J., Hayes, C., Perovich, L., Thorne, P. and Daghlian, C., 2004. TNT particle size distributions from detonated 155-mm howitzer rounds. Chemosphere, 55(3), pp.357-367.[[media:Taylor-2004 TNT PSDs.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>
The first isotope ratio to which CSIA was widely applied was that of carbon’s stable isotopes. The element carbon has two stable [[wikipedia:Isotope | isotopes]], <sup>12</sup>C and <sup>13</sup>C. Typically occurring under natural conditions in the ratio of 99:1, the small relative differences in the ratio of <sup>13</sup>C/<sup>12</sup>C for a given compound provide a wealth of information relevant to the investigation and remediation of contaminated sites and the environment<ref name="Hunkeler2008" />. The measured <sup>13</sup>C/<sup>12</sup>C ratio is normalized with respect to international isotopic standard reference materials and expressed in delta notation (e.g. δ<sup>13</sup>C), in units of permil (parts per thousand or [[wikipedia: Per mille | per mille]]). Isotopic standard reference materials for stable isotope ratio measurements of carbon and other light elements (H, N, O, S, Cl and others) have been administered since the 1950s through several sources including the [https://www.iaea.org/ International Atomic Energy Agency], the [https://www.nist.gov/ National Institute of Standards and Technology] and the [https://www.usgs.gov/ U.S. Geological Survey]. All stable isotope laboratories worldwide must report their isotopic data normalized to the appropriate standard reference materials to ensure global consistency and inter-comparability of results<ref name="Hunkeler2008" /><ref>Coplen, T.B., 2011. Guidelines and recommended terms for expression of stable‐isotope‐ratio and gas‐ratio measurement results. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 25(17), pp.2538-2560. [https://doi.org/10.1002/rcm.5129 doi: 10.1002/rcm.5129]</ref>.
 
  
==Applications to Environmental Remediation and Restoration – Forensics==
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The particulate nature of munitions constituents in the environment presents a distinct challenge to representative soil sampling. Figure 2 shows an array of discrete soil samples collected around the site of a low-order detonation – resultant soil concentrations vary by orders of magnitude within centimeters of each other. The inadequacy of discrete sampling is apparent in characterization studies from actual ranges which show wide-ranging concentrations and poor precision (Table 1).
Both naturally sourced contaminants (e.g., petroleum hydrocarbons) and man-made industrial organic contaminants (e.g., [[wikipedia: Organochloride | organochlorides]], [[wikipedia: Chlorofluorocarbon | chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)]], [[wikipedia: Nitro compound | nitroaromatics]], and gasoline additives such as [[wikipedia: Methyl tert-butyl ether | methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE)]]) can have distinct isotopic compositions due to differences in the raw materials and industrial synthesis processes used in their manufacture. This provides the basis for using CSIA as a [[wikipedia: Forensic science | forensic science]] tool<ref>Mancini, S.A., Lacrampe-Couloume, G. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2008. Source differentiation for benzene and chlorobenzene groundwater contamination: A field application of stable carbon and hydrogen isotope analyses. Environmental Forensics, 9(2-3), 177-186. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15275920802119086 doi: 10.1080/15275920802119086]</ref>. Different contamination sources or different spills from the same source may have distinct isotopic compositions that can be used to apportion responsibility in a mixed contaminant plume, such as in a situation where there is off-site migration and impact. In many cases, knowledge of the isotopic composition of the initial spill material is not available, but the forensic utility of the isotope ratios does not depend on that precondition. Distinguishing between potential source areas at a site can be done by comparing isotopic data from different areas of the site in the context of the geologic and hydrogeologic conceptual models to test source zone apportionment <ref name="Hunkeler2008" />. Although there may be significant overlap in isotopic compositions, successful forensic applications have taken advantage of the additional constraints afforded by coupling carbon isotope ratio measurements with other isotopes (usually [[wikipedia: Isotopes of hydrogen | hydrogen]], [[wikipedia: Isotopes of nitrogen | nitrogen]] and/or [[wikipedia: Isotopes of chlorine | chlorine]] isotope ratios)<ref name="Hunkeler2008" /><ref name="Hunkeler2001">Hunkeler, D., Andersen, N., Aravena, R., Bernasconi, S.M. and Butler, B.J., 2001. Hydrogen and carbon isotope fractionation during aerobic biodegradation of benzene. Environmental Science & Technology, 35(17), 3462-3467. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es0105111 doi: 10.1021/es0105111]</ref><ref>Mancini, S.A., Ulrich, A.C., Lacrampe-Couloume, G., Sleep, B., Edwards, E.A. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2003. Carbon and hydrogen isotopic fractionation during anaerobic biodegradation of benzene. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 69(1), 191-198. [https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.69.1.191-198.2003 doi: 10.1128/AEM.69.1.191-198.2003]</ref><ref>Shouakar-Stash, O., Frape, S.K. and Drimmie, R.J., 2003. Stable hydrogen, carbon and chlorine isotope measurements of selected chlorinated organic solvents. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology, 60(3), 211-228. [https://doi.org/10.1016/s0169-7722(02)00085-2 doi: 10.1016/S0169-7722(02)00085-2]</ref><ref name="Kuder2005">Kuder, T., Wilson, J.T., Kaiser, P., Kolhatkar, R., Philp, P. and Allen, J., 2005. Enrichment of stable carbon and hydrogen isotopes during anaerobic biodegradation of MTBE: microcosm and field evidence. Environmental Science & Technology, 39(1), 213-220. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es040420e doi: 10.1021/es040420e]</ref><ref name="Zwank2005">Zwank, L., Berg, M., Elsner, M., Schmidt, T.C., Schwarzenbach, R.P. and Haderlein, S.B., 2005. New evaluation scheme for two-dimensional isotope analysis to decipher biodegradation processes: Application to groundwater contamination by MTBE. Environmental Science & Technology, 39(4), 1018-1029. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es049650j doi: 10.1021/es049650j]</ref><ref>Sessions, A.L., 2006. Isotope‐ratio detection for gas chromatography. Journal of Separation Science, 29(12), 1946-1961. [https://doi.org/10.1002/jssc.200600002 doi: 10.1002/jssc.200600002]</ref><ref>Hartenbach, A., Hofstetter, T. B., Berg, M., Bolotin, J., Schwarzenbach, R. P., 2006. Using nitrogen isotope fractionation to assess abiotic reduction of nitroaromatic compounds. Environmental Science & Technology, 40(24), 7710-7719. [http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es061074z doi: 10.1021/es061074z]</ref><ref name="Penning2007">Penning, H. and Elsner, M., 2007. Intramolecular carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis by quantitative dry fragmentation of the phenylurea herbicide isoproturon in a combined injector/capillary reactor prior to GC separation. Analytical Chemistry, 79(21), 8399-8405. [https://doi.org/10.1021/ac071420a doi 10.1021/ac071420a]</ref><ref>Meyer, A.H., Penning, H., Lowag, H. and Elsner, M., 2008. Precise and accurate compound-specific carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis of atrazine: critical role of combustion oven conditions. Environmental Science & Technology, 42(21), 7757-7763. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es800534h doi: 10.1021/es800534h]</ref>.
 
  
==Quantifying and Monitoring Remediation Processes==
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In comparison to discrete sampling, incremental sampling tends to yield reproducible concentrations (low relative standard deviation [RSD]) that statistically better represent an area of interest<ref name= "Hewitt2009"/>.
Abiotic and biotic degradation reactions that transform contaminant compounds in the environment generally affect their isotopic compositions in systematic ways. This overall process is called  [[wikipedia: Isotope fractionation | isotope fractionation]] and is the key to CSIA providing insight and information on transformation pathways<ref name="Faure2004">Faure, G. and Mensing, T.M., 2005. Isotopes: principles and applications. John Wiley & Sons Inc.</ref><ref name= "Elsner2010.2"/>. While both degradative (e.g. chemical or biological transformation of contaminant to degradation products) and non-degradative processes (e.g. phase changes such as volatilization, sorption, diffusion) have the potential to result in carbon isotope fractionation, to date the largest fractionation signals are related to degradative processes in which bonds are broken<ref name="Hunkeler2008" />. This results from the [[wikipedia: Kinetic isotope effect | kinetic isotope effect]] and the fact that bonds involving a heavy stable isotope (e.g. <sup>13</sup>C-<sup>12</sup>C bond) have a lower [[wikipedia: Zero-point energy | zero-point energy]] and a larger [[wikipedia: Activation energy | activation energy]] than bonds containing exclusively light isotopes (e.g. <sup>12</sup>C-<sup>12</sup>C bond). Effectively this means that the rate of transformation of molecules containing exclusively light isotopes at the reactive site is faster than the rate of transformation of compounds containing a heavy isotope at the reactive site <ref name="Faure2004" /><ref name= "Elsner2010.2"/>.
 
  
==CSIA Signals of Transformation and Remediation==
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{| class="wikitable" style="float: right; text-align: center; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
The net outcome of isotope fractionation is that a contaminant that has been undergoing degradation can provide a significant signal of transformation, as its isotopic composition generally (but not always) increases to heavier values as a function of reaction progress<ref>Meckenstock, R.U., Morasch, B., Warthmann, R., Schink, B., Annweiler, E., Michaelis, W. and Richnow, H.H., 1999. 13C/12C isotope fractionation of aromatic hydrocarbons during microbial degradation. Environmental Microbiology, 1(5), 409-414. [https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1462-2920.1999.00050.x doi: 10.1046/j.1462-2920.1999.00050.x]</ref><ref>Hunkeler, D., Aravena, R. and Butler, B.J., 1999. Monitoring microbial dechlorination of tetrachloroethene (PCE) in groundwater using compound-specific stable carbon isotope ratios: microcosm and field studies. Environmental Science & Technology, 33(16), 2733-2738. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es981282u doi: 10.1021/es981282u]</ref><ref>Sherwood Lollar, B., Slater, G.F., Ahad, J., Sleep, B., Spivack, J., Brennan, M. and MacKenzie, P., 1999. Contrasting carbon isotope fractionation during biodegradation of trichloroethylene and toluene: Implications for intrinsic bioremediation. Organic Geochemistry, 30(8), 813-820. [https://doi.org/10.1016/s0146-6380(99)00064-9 doi: 10.1016/S0146-6380(99)00064-9]</ref><ref name= "Elsner2010.2"/>. The obvious corollary is that the products of degradation will generally be preferentially enriched in the lighter isotopes relative to the instantaneous isotopic composition of the parent compound from which they are derived. This principle holds for both chemical transformation and biologically mediated transformation reactions, and the principles described above apply to other elements such as hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, and chlorine as well.  The largest isotope effects have always been found at the reactive sites where bonds are broken or formed.
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|+ Table 1. Soil Sample Concentrations and Precision from Military Ranges Using Discrete and Incremental Sampling. (Data from Taylor et al. <ref name= "Taylor2011"/> and references therein.)
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|-
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! Military Range Type !! Analyte !! Range<br/>(mg/kg) !! Median<br/>(mg/kg) !! RSD<br/>(%)
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|-
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| colspan="5" style="text-align: left;" | '''Discrete Samples'''
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|-
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| Artillery FP || 2,4-DNT || <0.04 – 6.4 || 0.65 || 110
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|-
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| Antitank Rocket || HMX || 5.8 – 1,200 || 200 || 99
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|-
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| Bombing || TNT || 0.15 – 780 || 6.4 || 274
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|-
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| Mortar || RDX || <0.04 – 2,400 || 1.7 || 441
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|-
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| Artillery || RDX || <0.04 – 170 || <0.04 || 454
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|-
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| colspan="5" style="text-align: left;" | '''Incremental Samples*'''
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|-
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| Artillery FP || 2,4-DNT || 0.60 – 1.4 || 0.92 || 26
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|-
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| Bombing || TNT || 13 – 17 || 14 || 17
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|-
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| Artillery/Bombing || RDX || 3.9 – 9.4 || 4.8 || 38
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|-  
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| Thermal Treatment || HMX || 3.96 – 4.26 || 4.16 || 4
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|-
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| colspan="5" style="text-align: left; background-color: white;" | * For incremental samples, 30-100 increments and 3-10 replicate samples were collected.
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|}
  
Laboratory experiments have shown that not only does fractionation during transformation provide a strong signal of degradation, but also that the signal is highly reproducible<ref name="Hunkeler2008" />. For many organic contaminants of interest, the relationship between the change in isotopic composition and the degree of degradation is governed by a quantitative relationship – the Rayleigh equation<ref>Mariotti, A., Germon, J.C., Hubert, P., Kaiser, P., Letolle, R., Tardieux, A. and Tardieux, P., 1981. Experimental determination of nitrogen kinetic isotope fractionation: some principles; illustration for the denitrification and nitrification processes. Plant and Soil, 62(3), 413-430. [https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02374138 doi: 10.1007/BF02374138]</ref>. Specifically, for a given compound and degradation pathway or mechanism, the measured difference in isotopic composition can be quantitatively related to the extent of transformation (e.g. fraction or percentage of contaminant remaining) by the equation:
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==Incremental Sampling Approach==
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ISM is a requisite for representative and reproducible sampling of training ranges, but it is an involved process that is detailed thoroughly elsewhere<ref name= "Hewitt2009"/><ref name= "Taylor2011"/><ref name= "USEPA2006M"/>. In short, ISM involves the collection of many (30 to >100) increments in a systematic pattern within a decision unit (DU). The DU may cover an area where releases are thought to have occurred or may represent an area relevant to ecological receptors (e.g., sensitive species). Figure 3 shows the ISM sampling pattern in a simplified (5x5 square) DU. Increments are collected at a random starting point with systematic distances between increments. Replicate samples can be collected by starting at a different random starting point, often at a different corner of the DU. Practically, this grid pattern can often be followed with flagging or lathe marking DU boundaries and/or sampling lanes and with individual pacing keeping systematic distances between increments. As an example, an artillery firing point might include a 100x100 m DU with 81 increments.
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[[File:Beal1w2 Fig3.png|thumb|200 px|left|Figure 3. Example ISM sampling pattern on a square decision unit. Replicates are collected in a systematic pattern from a random starting point at a corner of the DU. Typically more than the 25 increments shown are collected]]
  
::'''Equation 1:'''&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<big>''R<sub>t</sub> = R<sub>0</sub> f<sup> (α -1)</sup>''</big>
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DUs can vary in shape (Figure 4), size, number of increments, and number of replicates according to a project’s data quality objectives.
  
where ''R<sub>t</sub>'' is the stable isotope ratio (<sup>13</sup>C/<sup>12</sup>C) of the compound at time ''t'', ''R<sub>0</sub>'' is the initial isotope ratio of the compound and ''f'' is the fraction of contaminant remaining where ''f'' = 1 at ''t'' = 0 and decreases to ''f'' = 0 when the reactant compound is fully transformed to products. The stable isotope fractionation factor (''α'') is defined as:
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[[File:Beal1w2 Fig4.png|thumb|right|250 px|Figure 4: Incremental sampling of a circular DU on snow shows sampling lanes with a two-person team in process of collecting the second replicate in a perpendicular path to the first replicate. (Photo: Matthew Bigl)]]
  
::'''Equation 2:'''&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<big>''α'' = (1000 + ''δ''<sup>13</sup>C<sub>''a''</sub>)/(1000 + ''δ''<sup>13</sup>C<sub>''b''</sub>)</big>
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==Sampling Tools==
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In many cases, energetic compounds are expected to reside within the soil surface. Figure 5 shows soil depth profiles on some studied impact areas and firing points. Overall, the energetic compound concentrations below 5-cm soil depth are negligible relative to overlying soil concentrations. For conventional munitions, this is to be expected as the energetic particles are relatively insoluble, and any dissolved compounds readily adsorb to most soils<ref>Pennington, J.C., Jenkins, T.F., Ampleman, G., Thiboutot, S., Brannon, J.M., Hewitt, A.D., Lewis, J., Brochu, S., 2006. Distribution and fate of energetics on DoD test and training ranges: Final Report. ERDC TR-06-13, Vicksburg, MS, USA. Also: SERDP/ESTCP Project ER-1155. [[media:Pennington-2006_ERDC-TR-06-13_ESTCP-ER-1155-FR.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>. Physical disturbance, as on hand grenade ranges, may require deeper sampling either with a soil profile or a corer/auger.
  
where subscripts ''a'' and ''b'' may represent a compound at time zero (''t''<sub>0</sub>) and at a later point (''t'') in a reaction; or a compound in a source zone, versus the compound in a downgradient well for instance.
+
[[File:Beal1w2 Fig5.png|thumb|left|200 px|Figure 5. Depth profiles of high explosive compounds at impact areas (bottom) and of propellant compounds at firing points (top). Data from: Hewitt et al. <ref>Hewitt, A.D., Jenkins, T.F., Ramsey, C.A., Bjella, K.L., Ranney, T.A. and Perron, N.M., 2005. Estimating energetic residue loading on military artillery ranges: Large decision units (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-05-7). [[media:Hewitt-2005 ERDC-CRREL TR-05-7.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref> and Jenkins et al. <ref>Jenkins, T.F., Ampleman, G., Thiboutot, S., Bigl, S.R., Taylor, S., Walsh, M.R., Faucher, D., Mantel, R., Poulin, I., Dontsova, K.M. and Walsh, M.E., 2008. Characterization and fate of gun and rocket propellant residues on testing and training ranges (No. ERDC-TR-08-1). [[media:Jenkins-2008 ERDC TR-08-1.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>]]
  
Equation 1 can be rearranged to produce Equation 3<ref name="Hunkeler2008" />:
+
Soil sampling with the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL) Multi-Increment Sampling Tool (CMIST) or similar device is an easy way to collect ISM samples rapidly and reproducibly. This tool has an adjustable diameter size corer and adjustable depth to collect surface soil plugs (Figure 6). The CMIST can be used at almost a walking pace (Figure 7) using a two-person sampling team, with one person operating the CMIST and the other carrying the sample container and recording the number of increments collected. The CMIST with a small diameter tip works best in soils with low cohesion, otherwise conventional scoops may be used. Maintaining consistent soil increment dimensions is critical.
  
::'''Equation 3:'''&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<big>''f'' = ''e''</big><sup>(''δ''<sup>13</sup>C<sub>groundwater</sub> - ''δ''<sup>13</sup>C<sub>source</sub>)<big> '''/''' ''ε''</big></sup>
+
The sampling tool should be cleaned between replicates and between DUs to minimize potential for cross-contamination<ref>Walsh, M.R., 2009. User’s manual for the CRREL Multi-Increment Sampling Tool. Engineer Research and Development Center / Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab (ERDC/CRREL) SR-09-1, Hanover, NH, USA.  [[media:Walsh-2009 ERDC-CRREL SR-09-1.pdf | Report.pdf]]</ref>.
  
where ''δ''<sup>13</sup>C<sub>groundwater</sub> is the measure of the isotope ratio in the organic contaminant in the sample of groundwater, ''δ''<sup>13</sup>C<sub>source</sub> is the isotopic ratio in the un-fractionated organic contaminant before biodegradation has occurred, and epsilon (''ε'') is the stable isotope enrichment factor, defined as:
+
==Sample Processing==
 +
While only 10 g of soil is typically used for chemical analysis, incremental sampling generates a sample weighing on the order of 1 kg. Splitting of a sample, either in the field or laboratory, seems like an easy way to reduce sample mass; however this approach has been found to produce high uncertainty for explosives and propellants, with a median RSD of 43.1%<ref name= "Hewitt2009"/>. Even greater error is associated with removing a discrete sub-sample from an unground sample. Appendix A in [https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-07/documents/epa-8330b.pdf U.S. EPA Method 8330B]<ref name= "USEPA2006M"/> provides details on recommended ISM sample processing procedures.
  
::'''Equation 4:'''&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<big>''ε'' = (''α'' -1) * 1000</big>
+
Incremental soil samples are typically air dried over the course of a few days. Oven drying thermally degrades some energetic compounds and should be avoided<ref>Cragin, J.H., Leggett, D.C., Foley, B.T., and Schumacher, P.W., 1985. TNT, RDX and HMX explosives in soils and sediments: Analysis techniques and drying losses. (CRREL Report 85-15) Hanover, NH, USA. [[media:Cragin-1985 CRREL 85-15.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>. Once dry, the samples are sieved with a 2-mm screen, with only the less than 2-mm fraction processed further. This size fraction represents the USDA definition of soil. Aggregate soil particles should be broken up and vegetation shredded to pass through the sieve. Samples from impact or demolition areas may contain explosive particles from low order detonations that are greater than 2 mm and should be identified, given appropriate caution, and potentially weighed.
  
==Implications for Remediation==
+
The <2-mm soil fraction is typically still ≥1 kg and impractical to extract in full for analysis. However, subsampling at this stage is not possible due to compositional heterogeneity, with the energetic compounds generally present as <0.5 mm particles<ref name= "Walsh2017"/><ref name= "Taylor2004"/>. Particle size reduction is required to achieve a representative and precise measure of the sample concentration. Grinding in a puck mill to a soil particle size <75 µm has been found to be required for representative/reproducible sub-sampling (Figure 8). For samples thought to contain propellant particles, a prolonged milling time is required to break down these polymerized particles and achieve acceptable precision (Figure 9). Due to the multi-use nature of some ranges, a 5-minute puck milling period can be used for all soils. Cooling periods between 1-minute milling intervals are recommended to avoid thermal degradation. Similar to field sampling, sub-sampling is done incrementally by spreading the sample out to a thin layer and collecting systematic random increments of consistent volume to a total mass for extraction of 10 g (Figure 10).
The quantitative relationships controlling isotope fractionation during transformation enable CSIA to provide a diagnostic signal that transformation is taking place, as well as a quantitative measure of the extent of transformation independent of conventional metrics based on changes in concentration. In some cases, due to signal sensitivity, changes in stable carbon isotope fractionation can be identified in advance of definitive reduction in contaminant concentrations, or before appearance of daughter products, providing an “early warning system” for confirmation of remediation<ref name="Morrill2005">Morrill, P.L., Lacrampe-Couloume, G., Slater, G.F., Sleep, B.E., Edwards, E.A., McMaster, M.L., Major, D.W. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2005. Quantifying chlorinated ethene degradation during reductive dechlorination at Kelly AFB using stable carbon isotopes. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology, 76(3), pp.279-293. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconhyd.2004.11.002 doi: 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2004.11.002]</ref>. This is particularly advantageous for field studies since changes in contaminant concentration result not only from transformation processes, but from physical transport and dispersal. For this reason, decreasing concentrations of contaminants alone are insufficient evidence that a site is undergoing transformation towards clean-up goals<ref>Wiedemeier, T.H., Wilson, J.T., Kampbell, D.H., Miller, R.N. and Hansen, J.E., 1995. Technical Protocol for Implementing Intrinsic Remediation with Long-Term Monitoring for Natural Attenuation of Fuel Contamination Dissolved in Groundwater. U.S. Air Force Center for Environmental Excellence, Technology Transfer Division, Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas.</ref><ref>Wiedemeier, T.H.,  Swanson, M.A., Moutoux, D.E., Gordon, E.K., Wilson, J.T., Wilson, B.H., Kampbell, D.H., Haas, P.E., Hansen, J.E., and Chapelle, F.H. 1998. Technical protocol for evaluating natural attenuation of chlorinated solvents in groundwater.  EPA-600-R-98-128. [//www.enviro.wiki/images/2/27/Wiedemeier-1998-Technical_Protocol_for_Evaluating_Natuaral_Attenuation.pdf Report pdf]</ref>. In contrast, as physical transport and dispersal processes without concomitant degradation produce negligible changes in isotopic composition, any significant isotope effects measured in the contaminants of concern provide a direct line of evidence that transformation is occurring, and also yields independent quantification of the rate of the transformation<ref>Sherwood Lollar, B., Slater, G.F., Sleep, B., Witt, M., Klecka, G.M., Harkness, M. and Spivack, J., 2001. Stable carbon isotope evidence for intrinsic bioremediation of tetrachloroethene and trichloroethene at area 6, Dover Air Force Base. Environmental Science & Technology, 35(2), 261-269. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es001227x doi: 10.1021/es001227x]</ref><ref name="Morrill2005" /><ref>McKelvie, J.R., Mackay, D.M., de Sieyes, N.R., Lacrampe-Couloume, G. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2007. Quantifying MTBE biodegradation in the Vandenberg Air Force Base ethanol release study using stable carbon isotopes. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology, 94(3), 157-165. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconhyd.2007.05.008 doi: 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2007.05.008]</ref>.
 
  
CSIA provides additional value to environmental investigation and remediation in that the degree of fractionation is reaction specific, giving researchers the ability to pinpoint which of a variety of possible degradation mechanisms may be dominating at a contaminated site. A specific example of this is 1,2-dichloroethane, an industrial chemical used in PVC production, production of furniture, upholstery and automobile parts and a common environmental contaminant of concern. Microbial biodegradation of this compound in the environment is common, but different organisms degrade the compound via different pathways (e.g. involving a C-Cl bond cleavage, or a C-H bond cleavage). As a result, CSIA can be used to positively identify which of the biodegradation pathways is operative at a site – information that can be critical to optimizing a remediation strategy<ref>Hunkeler, D. and Aravena, R., 2000. Evidence of Substantial Carbon Isotope Fractionation among Substrate, Inorganic Carbon, and Biomass during Aerobic Mineralization of 1, 2-Dichloroethane by Xanthobacter autotrophicus. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 66(11), 4870-4876. [https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.66.11.4870-4876.2000 doi: 10.1128/AEM.66.11.4870-4876.2000]</ref><ref>Hirschorn, S.K., Grostern, A., Lacrampe-Couloume, G., Edwards, E.A., MacKinnon, L., Repta, C., Major, D.W. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2007. Quantification of biotransformation of chlorinated hydrocarbons in a biostimulation study: Added value via stable carbon isotope analysis. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology, 94(3), 249-260. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconhyd.2007.07.001 doi: 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2007.07.001]</ref>. In other examples, CSIA has been a critical tool in deciphering the biodegradation potential and remediation mechanisms for benzene<ref name="Hunkeler2001" /><ref>Mancini, S.A., Lacrampe-Couloume, G., Jonker, H., van Breukelen, B.M., Groen, J., Volkering, F., Sherwood Lollar, B., 2002. Hydrogen isotope enrichment: An indicator of biodegradation at a petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated field site. Environmental Science & Technology, 36(11), 2464-2470. [http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es011253a doi: 10.1021/es011253a]</ref><ref>Mancini, S.A., Devine, C.E., Elsner, M., Nandi, M.E., Ulrich, A.C., Edwards, E.A. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2008. Isotopic evidence suggests different initial reaction mechanisms for anaerobic benzene biodegradation. Environmental Science & Technology, 42(22), 8290-8296. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es801107g doi: 10.1021/es801107g]</ref><ref>Fischer, A., Gehre, M., Breitfeld, J., Richnow, H.-H., 2009. Carbon and hydrogen isotope fractionation of benzene during biodegradation under sulphate-reducing conditions: A laboratory to field site approach. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 236, 2439-2447. [https://doi.org/10.1002/rcm.4049 doi:10.1002/rcm.4049]</ref>, methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE)<ref name="Zwank2005" /><ref>McKelvie, J.R., Hyman, M.R., Elsner, M., Smith, C., Aslett, D.M., Lacrampe-Couloume, G. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2009. Isotopic fractionation of methyl tert-butyl ether suggests different initial reaction mechanisms during aerobic biodegradation. Environmental Science & Technology, 43(8), 2793-2799. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es803307y doi: 10.1021/es803307y]</ref><ref>Elsner, M., McKelvie, J., Lacrampe Couloume, G. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2007. Insight into methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) stable isotope fractionation from abiotic reference experiments. Environmental Science & Technology, 41(16), 5693-5700. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es070531o doi: 10.1021/es070531o]</ref><ref name="Kuder2005" /> and other priority pollutants. In related applications, where abiotic and biotic transformations of a compound occur via different pathways and mechanisms, CSIA can differentiate between the relative contributions of chemical versus biological transformations<ref>Elsner, M., Chartrand, M., VanStone, N., Lacrampe Couloume, G. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2008. Identifying abiotic chlorinated ethene degradation: characteristic isotope patterns in reaction products with nanoscale zero-valent iron. Environmental Science & Technology, 42(16), 5963-5970. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es8001986 doi: 10.1021/es8001986]</ref><ref>Elsner, M., Lacrampe Couloume, G., Mancini, S., Burns, L. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2010. Carbon isotope analysis to evaluate nanoscale Fe (O) treatment at a chlorohydrocarbon contaminated site. Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation, 30(3), 79-95. [https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-6592.2010.01294.x doi: 10.1111/j.1745-6592.2010.01294.x]</ref>.
+
<li style="display: inline-block;">[[File:Beal1w2 Fig6.png|thumb|200 px|Figure 6: CMIST soil sampling tool (top) and with ejected increment core using a large diameter tip (bottom).]]</li>
 +
<li style="display: inline-block;">[[File:Beal1w2 Fig7.png|thumb|200 px|Figure 7: Two person sampling team using CMIST, bag-lined bucket, and increment counter. (Photos: Matthew Bigl)]]</li>
 +
<li style="display: inline-block;">[[File:Beal1w2 Fig8.png|thumb|200 px|Figure 8: Effect of machine grinding on RDX and TNT concentration and precision in soil from a hand grenade range. Data from Walsh et al.<ref>Walsh, M.E., Ramsey, C.A. and Jenkins, T.F., 2002. The effect of particle size reduction by grinding on subsampling variance for explosives residues in soil. Chemosphere, 49(10), pp.1267-1273. [https://doi.org/10.1016/S0045-6535(02)00528-3 doi: 10.1016/S0045-6535(02)00528-3]</ref> ]]</li>
 +
<li style="display: inline-block;">[[File:Beal1w2 Fig9.png|thumb|200 px|Figure 9: Effect of puck milling time on 2,4-DNT concentration and precision in soil from a firing point. Data from Walsh et al.<ref>Walsh, M.E., Ramsey, C.A., Collins, C.M., Hewitt, A.D., Walsh, M.R., Bjella, K.L., Lambert, D.J. and Perron, N.M., 2005. Collection methods and laboratory processing of samples from Donnelly Training Area Firing Points, Alaska, 2003 (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-05-6). [[media:Walsh-2005 ERDC-CRREL TR-05-6.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>.]]</li>
 +
<li style="display: inline-block;">[[File:Beal1w2 Fig10.png|thumb|200 px|center|Figure 10: Incremental sub-sampling of a milled soil sample spread out on aluminum foil.]]</li>
  
Not all transformation processes necessarily result in measurable isotopic fractionation. Fractionation factors can be small simply due to isotope dilution, e.g., where a C isotope effect occurs at a single reactive site in a molecule that has many carbon atoms. In such cases there is need for the development of models to disambiguate intrinsic versus apparent kinetic isotope effects <ref>Elsner, M., Zwank, L., Hunkeler, D. and Schwarzenbach, R.P., 2005. A new concept linking observable stable isotope fractionation to transformation pathways of organic pollutants. Environmental Science & Technology, 39(18), 6896-6916. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es0504587 doi: 10.1021/es0504587]</ref>, for use of multi-isotope analysis<ref name="Penning2007" />, and for the use of novel techniques such as <sup>13</sup>C NMR that can allow position-specific isotope analysis<ref>McKelvie, J.R., Elsner, M., Simpson, A.J., Sherwood Lollar, B., Simpson, M.J., 2010. Quantitative site-specific 2H NMR investigation of MTBE: Potential for investigating contaminant sources and fate. Environmental Science & Technology, 44(3), 1062-1068. [http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es9030276 doi: 10.1021/es9030276]</ref><ref>Julien, M., Parinet, J., Nun, P., Bayle, K., Höhener, P., Robins, R.J. and Remaud, G.S., 2015. Fractionation in position-specific isotope composition during vaporization of environmental pollutants measured with isotope ratio monitoring by <sup>13</sup>C nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry. Environmental Pollution, 205, 299-306. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2015.05.047 doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2015.05.047]</ref><ref>Gilbert, A., Yamada, K., Suda, K., Ueno, Y. and Yoshida, N., 2016. Measurement of position-specific <sup>13</sup>C isotopic composition of propane at the nanomole level. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 177, 205-216. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2016.01.017 doi: 10.1016/j.gca.2016.01.017]</ref>. The presence of additional rate-limiting steps in the transformation reaction can complicate the measurement of isotope fractionation in ways that may obscure the extent of transformation, yet may also yield other important information about transport effects<ref>Nijenhuis, I., Andert, J., Beck, K., Kastner, M., Diekert, G., Richnow, H-H., 2005. Stable isotope fractionation of tetrachloroethene during reductive dechlorination by sulfurospirillum multivorans and desulfitobacterium sp. Strain PCE-S and abiotic reactions with cyanocobalamin. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 71(7), 3413-3419. [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1169044/ doi: 10.1128/AEM.71.7.3413-3419.2005]</ref> or the efficiency of the enzymes involved in biodegradation<ref>Mancini, S.A., Hirschorn, S.K., Elsner, M., Lacrampe-Couloume, G., Sleep, B.E., Edwards, E.A. and Sherwood Lollar, B., 2006. Effects of trace element concentration on enzyme controlled stable isotope fractionation during aerobic biodegradation of toluene. Environmental Science & Technology, 40(24), 7675-7681. [https://doi.org/10.1021/es061363n doi: 10.1021/es061363n]</ref><ref>Sherwood Lollar, B., Hirschorn, S., Mundle, S.O., Grostern, A., Edwards, E.A. and Lacrampe-Couloume, G., 2010. Insights into enzyme kinetics of chloroethane biodegradation using compound-specific stable isotopes. Environmental Science & Technology, 44(19), 7498-7503. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es101330r doi: 10.1021/es101330r]</ref>.
+
==Analysis==
 +
Soil sub-samples are extracted and analyzed following [[Media: epa-2006-method-8330b.pdf | EPA Method 8330B]]<ref name= "USEPA2006M"/> and [[Media:epa-2007-method-8095.pdf | Method 8095]]<ref name= "USEPA2007M"/> using [[Wikipedia: High-performance liquid chromatography | High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC)]] and [[Wikipedia: Gas chromatography | Gas Chromatography (GC)]], respectively. Common estimated reporting limits for these analysis methods are listed in Table 2.
  
==Summary==
+
{| class="wikitable" style="float: center; text-align: center; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
Applications of CSIA are dependent on background information about the isotope fractionation factors associated with specific chemical reactions or biodegradation pathways. While fractionation can be calculated ''ab initio'' (from the beginning) by using molecular modeling methods, fractionation factors are typically empirically derived from laboratory experiments and other approaches. Recent guidance documents and review papers provide an essential resource with database compilations of this knowledge to date<ref>Meckenstock, R.U., Morasch, B., Griebler, C. and Richnow, H.H., 2004. Stable isotope fractionation analysis as a tool to monitor biodegradation in contaminated acquifers. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology, 75(3), 215-255. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconhyd.2004.06.003 doi: 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2004.06.003]</ref><ref name="Hunkeler2008" /><ref>Elsner, M. and Imfeld, G., 2016. Compound-specific isotope analysis (CSIA) of micropollutants in the environment—current developments and future challenges. Current opinion in biotechnology, 41, pp.60-72. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copbio.2016.04.014 doi: 10.1016/j.copbio.2016.04.014]</ref>.
+
|+ Table 2. Typical Method Reporting Limits for Energetic Compounds in Soil. (Data from Hewitt et al.<ref>Hewitt, A., Bigl, S., Walsh, M., Brochu, S., Bjella, K. and Lambert, D., 2007. Processing of training range soils for the analysis of energetic compounds (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-07-15). Hanover, NH, USA. [[media:Hewitt-2007 ERDC-CRREL TR-07-15.pdf| Report.pdf]]</ref>)
 +
|-
 +
! rowspan="2" | Compound
 +
! colspan="2" | Soil Reporting Limit (mg/kg)
 +
|-
 +
! HPLC (8330)
 +
! GC (8095)
 +
|-
 +
| HMX || 0.04 || 0.01
 +
|-
 +
| RDX || 0.04 || 0.006
 +
|-
 +
| [[Wikipedia: 1,3,5-Trinitrobenzene | TNB]] || 0.04 || 0.003
 +
|-
 +
| TNT || 0.04 || 0.002
 +
|-
 +
| [[Wikipedia: 2,6-Dinitrotoluene | 2,6-DNT]] || 0.08 || 0.002
 +
|-
 +
| 2,4-DNT || 0.04 || 0.002
 +
|-
 +
| 2-ADNT || 0.08 || 0.002
 +
|-
 +
| 4-ADNT || 0.08 || 0.002
 +
|-
 +
| NG || 0.1 || 0.01
 +
|-
 +
| [[Wikipedia: Dinitrobenzene | DNB ]] || 0.04 || 0.002
 +
|-
 +
| [[Wikipedia: Tetryl | Tetryl ]]  || 0.04 || 0.01
 +
|-
 +
| [[Wikipedia: Pentaerythritol tetranitrate | PETN ]] || 0.2 || 0.016
 +
|}
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
+
<references/>
<references />
 
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==
 
+
*[https://itrcweb.org/ Interstate Technology and Regulatory Council]
*[https://www.serdp-estcp.org/Program-Areas/Environmental-Restoration/Contaminated-Groundwater/Emerging-Issues/ER-200509 Validation of Chlorine and Oxygen Isotope Ratio Analysis to Differentiate Perchlorate Sources and to Document Perchlorate Biodegradation]
+
*[http://www.hawaiidoh.org/tgm.aspx Hawaii Department of Health]
*[https://www.serdp-estcp.org/Program-Areas/Environmental-Restoration/Contaminated-Groundwater/ER-201029 Integrated Stable Isotope-Reactive Transport Model Approach for Assessment of Chlorinated Solvent Degradation]
+
*[http://envirostat.org/ Envirostat]
*[https://www.coursera.org/learn/natural-attenuation-of-groundwater-contaminants/lecture/C0EN7/types-of-isotope-analysis-and-sampling-techniques-lab-analysis Online Lecture Course - Stable Isotopes]
 

Latest revision as of 18:58, 29 April 2020

The heterogeneous distribution of munitions constituents, released as particles from munitions firing and detonations on military training ranges, presents challenges for representative soil sample collection and for defensible decision making. Military range characterization studies and the development of the incremental sampling methodology (ISM) have enabled the development of recommended methods for soil sampling that produce representative and reproducible concentration data for munitions constituents. This article provides a broad overview of recommended soil sampling and processing practices for analysis of munitions constituents on military ranges.

Related Article(s):


CONTRIBUTOR(S): Dr. Samuel Beal


Key Resource(s):

Introduction

Figure 1: Downrange distance of visible propellant plume on snow from the firing of different munitions. Note deposition behind firing line for the 84-mm rocket. Data from: Walsh et al.[5][6]
Figure 2: A low-order detonation mortar round (top) with surrounding discrete soil samples produced concentrations spanning six orders of magnitude within a 10m by 10m area (bottom). (Photo and data: A.D. Hewitt)

Munitions constituents are released on military testing and training ranges through several common mechanisms. Some are locally dispersed as solid particles from incomplete combustion during firing and detonation. Also, small residual particles containing propellant compounds (e.g., nitroglycerin [NG] and 2,4-dinitrotoluene [2,4-DNT]) are distributed in front of and surrounding target practice firing lines (Figure 1). At impact areas and demolition areas, high order detonations typically yield very small amounts (<1 to 10 mg/round) of residual high explosive compounds (e.g., TNT , RDX and HMX ) that are distributed up to and sometimes greater than) 24 m from the site of detonation[7].

Low-order detonations and duds are thought to be the primary source of munitions constituents on ranges[8][9]. Duds are initially intact but may become perforated or fragmented into micrometer to centimeter;o0i0k-sized particles by nearby detonations[10]. Low-order detonations can scatter micrometer to centimeter-sized particles up to 20 m from the site of detonation[11]

The particulate nature of munitions constituents in the environment presents a distinct challenge to representative soil sampling. Figure 2 shows an array of discrete soil samples collected around the site of a low-order detonation – resultant soil concentrations vary by orders of magnitude within centimeters of each other. The inadequacy of discrete sampling is apparent in characterization studies from actual ranges which show wide-ranging concentrations and poor precision (Table 1).

In comparison to discrete sampling, incremental sampling tends to yield reproducible concentrations (low relative standard deviation [RSD]) that statistically better represent an area of interest[2].

Table 1. Soil Sample Concentrations and Precision from Military Ranges Using Discrete and Incremental Sampling. (Data from Taylor et al. [1] and references therein.)
Military Range Type Analyte Range
(mg/kg)
Median
(mg/kg)
RSD
(%)
Discrete Samples
Artillery FP 2,4-DNT <0.04 – 6.4 0.65 110
Antitank Rocket HMX 5.8 – 1,200 200 99
Bombing TNT 0.15 – 780 6.4 274
Mortar RDX <0.04 – 2,400 1.7 441
Artillery RDX <0.04 – 170 <0.04 454
Incremental Samples*
Artillery FP 2,4-DNT 0.60 – 1.4 0.92 26
Bombing TNT 13 – 17 14 17
Artillery/Bombing RDX 3.9 – 9.4 4.8 38
Thermal Treatment HMX 3.96 – 4.26 4.16 4
* For incremental samples, 30-100 increments and 3-10 replicate samples were collected.

Incremental Sampling Approach

ISM is a requisite for representative and reproducible sampling of training ranges, but it is an involved process that is detailed thoroughly elsewhere[2][1][3]. In short, ISM involves the collection of many (30 to >100) increments in a systematic pattern within a decision unit (DU). The DU may cover an area where releases are thought to have occurred or may represent an area relevant to ecological receptors (e.g., sensitive species). Figure 3 shows the ISM sampling pattern in a simplified (5x5 square) DU. Increments are collected at a random starting point with systematic distances between increments. Replicate samples can be collected by starting at a different random starting point, often at a different corner of the DU. Practically, this grid pattern can often be followed with flagging or lathe marking DU boundaries and/or sampling lanes and with individual pacing keeping systematic distances between increments. As an example, an artillery firing point might include a 100x100 m DU with 81 increments.

Figure 3. Example ISM sampling pattern on a square decision unit. Replicates are collected in a systematic pattern from a random starting point at a corner of the DU. Typically more than the 25 increments shown are collected

DUs can vary in shape (Figure 4), size, number of increments, and number of replicates according to a project’s data quality objectives.

Figure 4: Incremental sampling of a circular DU on snow shows sampling lanes with a two-person team in process of collecting the second replicate in a perpendicular path to the first replicate. (Photo: Matthew Bigl)

Sampling Tools

In many cases, energetic compounds are expected to reside within the soil surface. Figure 5 shows soil depth profiles on some studied impact areas and firing points. Overall, the energetic compound concentrations below 5-cm soil depth are negligible relative to overlying soil concentrations. For conventional munitions, this is to be expected as the energetic particles are relatively insoluble, and any dissolved compounds readily adsorb to most soils[12]. Physical disturbance, as on hand grenade ranges, may require deeper sampling either with a soil profile or a corer/auger.

Figure 5. Depth profiles of high explosive compounds at impact areas (bottom) and of propellant compounds at firing points (top). Data from: Hewitt et al. [13] and Jenkins et al. [14]

Soil sampling with the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL) Multi-Increment Sampling Tool (CMIST) or similar device is an easy way to collect ISM samples rapidly and reproducibly. This tool has an adjustable diameter size corer and adjustable depth to collect surface soil plugs (Figure 6). The CMIST can be used at almost a walking pace (Figure 7) using a two-person sampling team, with one person operating the CMIST and the other carrying the sample container and recording the number of increments collected. The CMIST with a small diameter tip works best in soils with low cohesion, otherwise conventional scoops may be used. Maintaining consistent soil increment dimensions is critical.

The sampling tool should be cleaned between replicates and between DUs to minimize potential for cross-contamination[15].

Sample Processing

While only 10 g of soil is typically used for chemical analysis, incremental sampling generates a sample weighing on the order of 1 kg. Splitting of a sample, either in the field or laboratory, seems like an easy way to reduce sample mass; however this approach has been found to produce high uncertainty for explosives and propellants, with a median RSD of 43.1%[2]. Even greater error is associated with removing a discrete sub-sample from an unground sample. Appendix A in U.S. EPA Method 8330B[3] provides details on recommended ISM sample processing procedures.

Incremental soil samples are typically air dried over the course of a few days. Oven drying thermally degrades some energetic compounds and should be avoided[16]. Once dry, the samples are sieved with a 2-mm screen, with only the less than 2-mm fraction processed further. This size fraction represents the USDA definition of soil. Aggregate soil particles should be broken up and vegetation shredded to pass through the sieve. Samples from impact or demolition areas may contain explosive particles from low order detonations that are greater than 2 mm and should be identified, given appropriate caution, and potentially weighed.

The <2-mm soil fraction is typically still ≥1 kg and impractical to extract in full for analysis. However, subsampling at this stage is not possible due to compositional heterogeneity, with the energetic compounds generally present as <0.5 mm particles[7][11]. Particle size reduction is required to achieve a representative and precise measure of the sample concentration. Grinding in a puck mill to a soil particle size <75 µm has been found to be required for representative/reproducible sub-sampling (Figure 8). For samples thought to contain propellant particles, a prolonged milling time is required to break down these polymerized particles and achieve acceptable precision (Figure 9). Due to the multi-use nature of some ranges, a 5-minute puck milling period can be used for all soils. Cooling periods between 1-minute milling intervals are recommended to avoid thermal degradation. Similar to field sampling, sub-sampling is done incrementally by spreading the sample out to a thin layer and collecting systematic random increments of consistent volume to a total mass for extraction of 10 g (Figure 10).

  • Figure 6: CMIST soil sampling tool (top) and with ejected increment core using a large diameter tip (bottom).
  • Figure 7: Two person sampling team using CMIST, bag-lined bucket, and increment counter. (Photos: Matthew Bigl)
  • Figure 8: Effect of machine grinding on RDX and TNT concentration and precision in soil from a hand grenade range. Data from Walsh et al.[17]
  • Figure 9: Effect of puck milling time on 2,4-DNT concentration and precision in soil from a firing point. Data from Walsh et al.[18].
  • Figure 10: Incremental sub-sampling of a milled soil sample spread out on aluminum foil.
  • Analysis

    Soil sub-samples are extracted and analyzed following EPA Method 8330B[3] and Method 8095[4] using High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) and Gas Chromatography (GC), respectively. Common estimated reporting limits for these analysis methods are listed in Table 2.

    Table 2. Typical Method Reporting Limits for Energetic Compounds in Soil. (Data from Hewitt et al.[19])
    Compound Soil Reporting Limit (mg/kg)
    HPLC (8330) GC (8095)
    HMX 0.04 0.01
    RDX 0.04 0.006
    TNB 0.04 0.003
    TNT 0.04 0.002
    2,6-DNT 0.08 0.002
    2,4-DNT 0.04 0.002
    2-ADNT 0.08 0.002
    4-ADNT 0.08 0.002
    NG 0.1 0.01
    DNB 0.04 0.002
    Tetryl 0.04 0.01
    PETN 0.2 0.016

    References

    1. ^ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Taylor, S., Jenkins, T.F., Bigl, S., Hewitt, A.D., Walsh, M.E. and Walsh, M.R., 2011. Guidance for Soil Sampling for Energetics and Metals (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-11-15). Report.pdf
    2. ^ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Hewitt, A.D., Jenkins, T.F., Walsh, M.E., Bigl, S.R. and Brochu, S., 2009. Validation of sampling protocol and the promulgation of method modifications for the characterization of energetic residues on military testing and training ranges (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-09-6). Engineer Research and Development Center / Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab (ERDC/CRREL) TR-09-6, Hanover, NH, USA. Report.pdf
    3. ^ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA), 2006. Method 8330B (SW-846): Nitroaromatics, Nitramines, and Nitrate Esters by High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC), Rev. 2. Washington, D.C. Report.pdf
    4. ^ 4.0 4.1 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA), 2007. Method 8095 (SW-846): Explosives by Gas Chromatography. Washington, D.C. Report.pdf
    5. ^ Walsh, M.R., Walsh, M.E., Ampleman, G., Thiboutot, S., Brochu, S. and Jenkins, T.F., 2012. Munitions propellants residue deposition rates on military training ranges. Propellants, Explosives, Pyrotechnics, 37(4), pp.393-406. doi: 10.1002/prep.201100105
    6. ^ Walsh, M.R., Walsh, M.E., Hewitt, A.D., Collins, C.M., Bigl, S.R., Gagnon, K., Ampleman, G., Thiboutot, S., Poulin, I. and Brochu, S., 2010. Characterization and Fate of Gun and Rocket Propellant Residues on Testing and Training Ranges: Interim Report 2. (ERDC/CRREL TR-10-13. Also: ESTCP Project ER-1481) Report
    7. ^ 7.0 7.1 Walsh, M.R., Temple, T., Bigl, M.F., Tshabalala, S.F., Mai, N. and Ladyman, M., 2017. Investigation of Energetic Particle Distribution from High‐Order Detonations of Munitions. Propellants, Explosives, Pyrotechnics, 42(8), pp.932-941. doi: 10.1002/prep.201700089 Report.pdf
    8. ^ Hewitt, A.D., Jenkins, T.F., Walsh, M.E., Walsh, M.R. and Taylor, S., 2005. RDX and TNT residues from live-fire and blow-in-place detonations. Chemosphere, 61(6), pp.888-894. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2005.04.058
    9. ^ Walsh, M.R., Walsh, M.E., Poulin, I., Taylor, S. and Douglas, T.A., 2011. Energetic residues from the detonation of common US ordnance. International Journal of Energetic Materials and Chemical Propulsion, 10(2). doi: 10.1615/IntJEnergeticMaterialsChemProp.2012004956 Report.pdf
    10. ^ Walsh, M.R., Thiboutot, S., Walsh, M.E., Ampleman, G., Martel, R., Poulin, I. and Taylor, S., 2011. Characterization and fate of gun and rocket propellant residues on testing and training ranges (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-11-13). Engineer Research and Development Center / Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab (ERDC/CRREL) TR-11-13, Hanover, NH, USA. Report.pdf
    11. ^ 11.0 11.1 Taylor, S., Hewitt, A., Lever, J., Hayes, C., Perovich, L., Thorne, P. and Daghlian, C., 2004. TNT particle size distributions from detonated 155-mm howitzer rounds. Chemosphere, 55(3), pp.357-367. Report.pdf
    12. ^ Pennington, J.C., Jenkins, T.F., Ampleman, G., Thiboutot, S., Brannon, J.M., Hewitt, A.D., Lewis, J., Brochu, S., 2006. Distribution and fate of energetics on DoD test and training ranges: Final Report. ERDC TR-06-13, Vicksburg, MS, USA. Also: SERDP/ESTCP Project ER-1155. Report.pdf
    13. ^ Hewitt, A.D., Jenkins, T.F., Ramsey, C.A., Bjella, K.L., Ranney, T.A. and Perron, N.M., 2005. Estimating energetic residue loading on military artillery ranges: Large decision units (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-05-7). Report.pdf
    14. ^ Jenkins, T.F., Ampleman, G., Thiboutot, S., Bigl, S.R., Taylor, S., Walsh, M.R., Faucher, D., Mantel, R., Poulin, I., Dontsova, K.M. and Walsh, M.E., 2008. Characterization and fate of gun and rocket propellant residues on testing and training ranges (No. ERDC-TR-08-1). Report.pdf
    15. ^ Walsh, M.R., 2009. User’s manual for the CRREL Multi-Increment Sampling Tool. Engineer Research and Development Center / Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab (ERDC/CRREL) SR-09-1, Hanover, NH, USA. Report.pdf
    16. ^ Cragin, J.H., Leggett, D.C., Foley, B.T., and Schumacher, P.W., 1985. TNT, RDX and HMX explosives in soils and sediments: Analysis techniques and drying losses. (CRREL Report 85-15) Hanover, NH, USA. Report.pdf
    17. ^ Walsh, M.E., Ramsey, C.A. and Jenkins, T.F., 2002. The effect of particle size reduction by grinding on subsampling variance for explosives residues in soil. Chemosphere, 49(10), pp.1267-1273. doi: 10.1016/S0045-6535(02)00528-3
    18. ^ Walsh, M.E., Ramsey, C.A., Collins, C.M., Hewitt, A.D., Walsh, M.R., Bjella, K.L., Lambert, D.J. and Perron, N.M., 2005. Collection methods and laboratory processing of samples from Donnelly Training Area Firing Points, Alaska, 2003 (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-05-6). Report.pdf
    19. ^ Hewitt, A., Bigl, S., Walsh, M., Brochu, S., Bjella, K. and Lambert, D., 2007. Processing of training range soils for the analysis of energetic compounds (No. ERDC/CRREL-TR-07-15). Hanover, NH, USA. Report.pdf

    See Also