环境修复
环境科学
土壤污染
环境化学
臭氧
土壤修复
污染
生物修复
土壤水分
石油
废物管理
人体净化
环境工程
摘要
Petroleum contamination is ubiquitous during
extraction, transportation, refining, and storage. Contamination
damages the soil’s ecosystem function, reduces its aesthetics, and
poses a potential threat to human beings. The overall goals of this
dissertation are to advance understanding of the mechanisms behind
ozonation of petroleum-contaminated soil and to configure an
effective integrated bioremediation + ozonation remedial strategy
to remove the overall organic carbon. Using a soil column, I
conducted batch ozonation experiments for different soils and at
different moisture levels. I measured multiple parameters: e.g.,
total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) and dissolved organic carbon
(DOC), to build a full understanding of the data that led to the
solid conclusions. I first demonstrated the feasibility of using
ozone to attack heavy petroleum hydrocarbons in soil settings. I
identified the physical and chemical hurdles (e.g., moisture, mass
transfer, pH) needed to be overcome to make the integration of
chemical oxidation and biodegradation more efficient and defines
the mechanisms behind the experimental observations. Next, I
completed a total carbon balance, which revealed that multiple
components, including soil organic matter (SOM) and non-TPH
petroleum, competed for ozone, although TPH was relatively more
reactive. Further experiments showed that poor soil mixing and high
soil-moisture content hindered mass transfer of ozone to react with
the TPH. Finally, I pursued the theme of optimizing the integration
of ozonation and biodegradation through a multi-stage strategy. I
conducted multi-stages of ozonation and bioremediation for two
benchmark soils with distinctly different oils to test if and how
much ozonation enhanced biodegradation and vice versa. With pH and
moisture optimized for each step, pre-ozonation versus
post-ozonation was assessed for TPH removal and mineralization.
Multi-cycle treatment was able to achieve the TPH regulatory
standard when biodegradation alone could not. Ozonation did not
directly enhance the biodegradation rate of TPH; instead, ozone
converted TPH into DOC that was biodegraded and mineralized. The
major take-home lesson from my studies is that multi-stage
ozonation + biodegradation is a useful remediation tool for
petroleum contamination in soil.
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