Capitulo 1
Capitulo 1
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Remediation engineering as a discipline has evolved only in the last few years. Some of
the traditional engineering disciplines such as civil engineering, mechanical engineering, and
electrical engineering have been taught and practiced in an organized fashion during the last
few centuries. There is a wealth of knowledge available for the practicing engineers in these
disciplines. Some of the younger subdisciplines such as structural, geotechnical, transporta-
tion, and water resources engineering within the major area of civil engineering have also
taken firmer roots within the organized world of engineering. These subdisciplines have
benefitted from an enormous amount of research and developmental efforts in academic
institutions in the U.S. and around the world. Environmental engineering, probably one of
the youngest subdisciplines in engineering, is still evolving with respect to society’s expec-
tations and demands for a cleaner environment. Remediation engineering is an even younger
subdiscipline of environmental engineering.
Beginning in the late 1960s and gathering momentum ever since, the whole picture
concerning our environment has changed. Prior to the 1960s, society’s demands on environ-
mental engineers were limited to the provision of clean drinking water and disposal of
domestic wastes. Hence, this discipline was aptly called public health or sanitary
engineering. With time, environmental engineers started to focus on activities related to
solid waste, water quality, and air quality.
The application of highly sensitive analytical techniques to environmental analysis has
provided society with disturbing information. As a result, significant changes in
requirements for environmental protection occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The
late 1970s and early 1980s have seen an emerging scientific and public awareness of the
potential for detrimental health effects due to the accumulation of hazardous compounds in
the various environmental media such as soil, groundwater, surface water, and air. The
occurrence and fate of trace levels of organic and inorganic compounds in the environment
and the passing of new regulations to address these concerns spawned the need for a new
group of specialists known as “remediation engineers.”
What is remediation engineering? It could be simply defined as the next phase in the
evolution of environmental engineering. More precisely, it could be defined as the develop-
ment and implementation of strategies to clean up (remediate) the environment by removing
the hazardous contamination disposed in properties since the beginning of the industrial
revolution.
Scientists and engineers practicing remediation engineering have to learn the nuances of
investigative techniques, data collection, and treatment technologies. This education
includes a new understanding of the physical and chemical behavior of the contaminants, the
geologic