Dynamics of Photodecomposition Biodegradation and Volatilization Behaviors of Petroleum on Soil Surface

2011 ◽  
Vol 181-182 ◽  
pp. 480-484
Author(s):  
Yu Bo Xia ◽  
Yue Suo Yang ◽  
Xin Qiang Du ◽  
Ming Xing Yang

petroleum contamination is a very common environmental problem. Soil as the protective of groundwater, its remediation relates the security of groundwater, so we simulated the remediation of surface soil. From the experiment, we found that the natural attenuation of contaminated soil is a complicated process. The more processes contained, the easier petroleum attenuated. These processes can accelerate some of components reduce. Volatilization can only attenuate 24.85% petroleum, but if volatilization is coupled with biodegradation, that 89.99% petroleum can be attenuated. With the help of photodecomposition, 97.26% petroleum can be consumed. Volatilization action is a kind of physical attenuation mode, and it may not make some of components which are hard to volatilize into the air. Biodegradation action is a kind of biologic process which depend on the activity of bio-enzyme, and it need microbe compose a steady population. Photodecomposition is a kind of photochemical attenuation mode. If there are three or more attenuation processes exist, the powerful process will play a lead role, such as photodecomposition and biodegradation. From the result we can obtain that 59.83% contribution rate was caused by photodecomposition, and it can decay more petroleum than biodegradation and volatilization.

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Nguyen Thi Lan Binh ◽  
Nguyen Trung Hoang ◽  
Nguyen Thi Thanh Truc ◽  
Vu Dinh Khang ◽  
Hung Anh Le

An increase in heavy metal soil contamination, especially lead, in the industrial area or near industrial areas has become a serious environmental problem. An industrial zone including paints, electrical plants, metal works, machining, and smelting factories, in the suburban of Ho Chi Minh City, was chosen as the study area. Soil samples were collected from the industrial area and in the residential area next to the industrial area for three experiments, namely, lead content in the surface soils, lead leachate into the water, and movement of lead in soil. Then, the results were compared to the values in the Soil Contamination Countermeasures Law of the Japan Ministry of Environment to assess the possibility of soil contamination which may cause health risks to a human living in that area. The results of the analysis show that the soil has been contaminated by lead. In particular, the lead concentrations of the surface soil samples are 23–35 mg kg-1, while the lead elution of soil samples is quite high, about 0.6 mg L-1. With these results, the soil can harm people by direct ingestion. More importantly, this work proves that lead species have been going down gradually. To assess the possibility of lead approaching groundwater, more further studies need to be achieved.


2010 ◽  
Vol 53 (10) ◽  
pp. 1527-1532 ◽  
Author(s):  
YuanJun Zhu ◽  
YunQiang Wang ◽  
MingAn Shao

2007 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 182-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roongnapa Tongarun ◽  
Ekawan Luepromchai ◽  
Alisa S. Vangnai

Author(s):  
Reem Ismail ◽  
Saeid Shafieiyoun ◽  
Riyadh Al Raoush ◽  
Fereidoun Rezanezhad

Most of the prediction theories regarding dissolution of organic contaminants in the subsurface systems have been proposed based on the static water conditions; and the influence of water fluctuations on mass removal requires further investigations. In this study, it was intended to investigate the effects of water table fluctuations on biogeochemical properties of the contaminated soil at the smear zone between the vadose zone and the groundwater table. An automated 60 cm soil column system was developed and connected to a hydrostatic equilibrium reservoir to impose the water regime by using a multi-channel pump. Four homogenized hydrocarbon contaminated soil columns were constructed and two of them were fully saturated and remained under static water conditions while another two columns were operated under water table fluctuations between the soil surface and 40 cm below it. The experiments were run for 150 days and relevant geochemical indicators as well as dissolved phase concentrations were analyzed at 30 and 50 cm below the soil surface in all columns. The results indicated significant difference in terms of biodegradation effectiveness between the smear zones exposed to static and water table fluctuation conditions. This presentation will provide an overview of the experimental approach, mass removal efficiency, and key findings.


2021 ◽  
Vol 261 ◽  
pp. 04027
Author(s):  
Na Ding ◽  
Mengxuan Han ◽  
Yao He ◽  
Xinshuai Wang ◽  
Yuxuan Pan ◽  
...  

Soil heavy metal pollution has become an environmental problem that has attracted worldwide attention. Nanomaterials have the advantages of large specific surface area, strong adsorption capacity and high reactivity, making nanomaterials remediation technology an excellent application prospect in contaminated soil remediation. This article introduces the main classification of nanomaterials, summarizes the mechanism of nanomaterials to remove heavy metals, and the combination technology of nanomaterials. It provides a scientific reference for the further development of this field.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavel Ivanov ◽  
Karin Eusterhues ◽  
Kai Uwe Totsche

<p>Understanding of ongoing biogeochemical processes (natural attenuation) within contaminated soils is crucial for the development of plausible remediation strategies. We studied a tar oil contaminated soil with weak grass vegetation at a former manufactured gas plant site in Germany. Despite of the apparent toxicity (the soil contained up to 120 g kg<sup>-1</sup> petroleum hydrocarbons, 26 g kg<sup>-1</sup> toxic metals, and 100 mg kg<sup>-1</sup> polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons), the contaminated layers have 3-5 times as much cell counts as an uncontaminated control soil nearby. To test, if the geometry of the pore space provides favourable living space for microorganisms, we applied scanning electron microscopy to the thin sections and calculated on sets of 15 images per layer three specific Minkowski functionals, connected to soil total porosity, interface, and hydraulic parameters.</p><p>Our investigation showed that the uncontaminated control soil has a relatively low porosity of 15-20 %, of which 50-70 % is comprised of small (< 15 µm) pores. These pores are poorly connected and show high distances between them (mean distance to the next pore 10 µm). The dominating habitats in the control soil are therefore created by small pores. They provide good protection from predators and desiccation, but input of dissolved organic C and removal of metabolic products are diffusion limited. Coarser pores (>15 µm) provide less space (< 50 % of total porosity) and solid surface area (< 20 %), are prone to desiccation and offer less protection from predators. However, they serve as preferential flow paths for the soil solution (input of nutrients) and are well aerated, therefore we expect the microbial activity in them to appear in “hot moments”, i.e. after rain events.</p><p>All layers of the contaminated profile have higher porosities (20-70 %) than the control. Coarse pores comprise 83-90 % of total pore area and create 34-52 % of total interface. Pores are also more connected and tortuous than in the control soil, which implies a better aeration and circulation of soil solution. The loops of pore channels may retain soil solution and be therefore preferably populated with microorganisms. The small (< 15 µm) pores comprise less than 17 % of total porosity but represent a substantial proportion of the interface (48-66 % vs 82-91 % in control). In the uppermost layer of the contaminated profile, such pores occur in plant residues, are close to the largest pores (mean distance to the next pore 4 µm) and therefore, along with good protection, are supplied with air, water, and non-tar C. In the middle of the profile, the small pores, presumably constantly filled with water, are located within dense tar pieces remote from the neighbouring pores (mean distance to the next pore 22 µm), and therefore, with hindered aeration and no supply of non-tar C, may create anaerobic domains of tar attenuation.</p><p>Our results show that the contaminated soil offers more favourable conditions for microorganisms than the control soil, probably because the hydrocarbons provide suitable energy and nutrition sources and a beneficial pore space geometry.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cécile Gomez ◽  
Dharumarajan Subramanian ◽  
Philippe Lagacherie ◽  
Jean Riotte ◽  
Sylvain Ferrant ◽  
...  

<p>Mapping soil properties is becoming more and more challenging due to the increase in anthropogenic modification of the landscape, calling for new methods to identify these changes. A striking example of anthropogenic modifications of soil properties is the widespread practice in South India of applying large quantities of silt from dry river dams (or “tanks”) to agricultural fields. Whereas several studies have demonstrated the interest of tank silt for soil fertility, no assessment of the actual extent of this age-old traditional practice exists. Over pedological contexts characterized by Vertisol, Ferralsols and Chromic Luvisols in sub-humid and semi-arid Tropical climate, this practice is characterized by an application of black-colored tank silt providing from Vertisol, to red-colored soils such as Ferralsols. The objective of this work was to evaluate the usefulness of Sentinel-2 images for mapping tank silt applications, hypothesizing that observed changes in soil surface color can be a proxy for tank silt application.</p><p>We used data collected in a cultivated watershed (Berambadi, Karnataka state, South India) including 217 soil surface samples characterized in terms of Munsell color. We used two Sentinel-2 images acquired on February 2017 and April 2017. The surface soil color over each Sentinel-2 image was classified into two-class (“Black” and “Red” soils). A change of soil color from “Red” in February 2017 to “Black” in April 2017 was attributed to tank silt application. Soil color changes were analyzed accounting for possible surface soil moisture changes. The proposed methodology was based on a well-balanced Calibration data created from the initial imbalanced Calibration dataset thanks to the Synthetic Minority Over-sampling Technique (SMOTE) methodology, coupled to the Cost-Sensitive Classification And Regression Trees (Cost-Sensitive CART) algorithm. To estimate the uncertainties of i) the two-class classification at each date and ii) the change of soil color from “Red” to “Black”, a bootstrap procedure was used providing fifty two-class classifications for each Sentinel-2 image.</p><p>The results showed that 1) the CART method allowed to classify the “Red” and “Black” soil with overall accuracy around 0.81 and 0.76 from the Sentinel-2 image acquired on February and April 2017, respectively, 2) a tank silt application was identified over 97 fields with high confidence and over 107 fields with medium confidence, based on the bootstrap results and 3) the identified soil color changes are not related to a surface soil moisture change between both dates. With the actual availability of the Sentinel-2 and the past availability of the LANDSAT satellite imageries, this study may open a way toward a simple and accurate method for delivering tank silt application mapping and so to study and possibly quantify retroactively this farmer practice.</p>


Bothalia ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 13 (1/2) ◽  
pp. 199-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. J. Bredenkamp ◽  
G. K. Theron

The vegetation of the Ventersdorp Geological System of the Suikerbosrand Nature Reserve is analysed and classified according to the Braun-Blanquet method. Descriptions of the plant communities include description of habitat features, the identification of differentiating species groups as well as the listing of prominent and less conspicuous species for the tree, shrub and herbaceous layers. The habitat features that are associated with differences in vegetation include altitude, aspect, slope, rockiness of soil surface, soil depth and soil texture.


Atmosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 893
Author(s):  
Katsuro Hagiwara ◽  
Tamaki Matsumoto ◽  
Purevsuren Tsedendamba ◽  
Kenji Baba ◽  
Buho Hoshino

The Gobi Desert is a major source of dust events, whose frequency of occurrence and damage caused have recently significantly increased. In the present study, we investigated the types of live bacteria present in the surface soil of the Gobi Desert in Mongolia, and determined their genetic identification as well as their geographical distribution. During the survey, four different topographies (dry lake bed, wadi, well, and desert steppe) were selected, and land characteristics were monitored for moisture and temperature. The surface soil was aerobically cultured to isolate bacterial colonies, and their 16s rDNA regions were sequenced. The sequence data were identified through NCBI-BLAST analysis and generated phylogenetic trees. The results revealed two phyla and seven families of isolates from the sample points. Each isolate was characterized by their corresponding sample site. The characteristics of land use and soil surface bacteria were compared. Most of the bacteria originated from the soil, however, animal-derived bacteria were also confirmed in areas used by animals. Our findings confirmed the existence of live bacteria in the dust-generating area, suggesting that their presence could affect animal and human health. Therefore, it is necessary to further investigate dust microbes based on the One Health concept.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document