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2010 Awards

Zachara Receives Highest Battelle Honor

Veteran geochemist John Zachara has been named a Battelle Fellow, a rank shared by only three other scientists at PNNL.

The honor recognizes John, who's been at PNNL for 31 years, for his scientific accomplishments, leadership and long record of service as advisor to multiple DOE offices.

John, Fundamental and Computational Sciences Directorate, is a nationally recognized expert on how contaminants such as uranium or chromate flow underground and react with sediments, rocks and water. For decades he has studied the complex subsurface environment below Hanford where years of weapons-grade nuclear materials production released radioactive and chemical materials to the ground and subsurface. In the process, he solved many perplexing issues.

For example, John has led a team trying to determine why a decades-old uranium plume underneath Hanford hasn't dispersed as predicted 15 years ago. The team found that high Columbia River flows in the spring cause fluctuations in the groundwater water table that allow uranium to move from sediments above the aquifer. And when the nuclear fission byproduct known as cesium 137 traveled faster underground than anticipated at another location, John found that residual heat and high salt concentrations from the wastes unexpectedly affected how water and minerals reacted with the cesium.

John also has collaborated with microbiologists to understand how bacteria and other tiny organisms influence the movement of contaminants in harsh geochemical environments that were previously thought to be lifeless. Some microorganisms can slow down or stop contaminants by packing them inside newly formed minerals, in the process removing the toxic substances from water.

"He's gotten a handle on some of the most extreme environments with respect to chemistry, temperature and radiation," said Doug Ray, Associate Laboratory Director for Fundamental & Computational Sciences. "And what he's learned can be generalized to many other legacy waste sites, as well as applied to the challenge of understanding geologic and terrestrial sequestration of carbon dioxide and other fossil fuel emissions."  (announced 9/1/2010)

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