Literature DB >> 21723652

Terrestrial exposure of oilfield flowline additives diminish soil structural stability and remediative microbial function.

S J George1, J Sherbone, C Hinz, M Tibbett.   

Abstract

Onshore oil production pipelines are major installations in the petroleum industry, stretching many thousands of kilometres worldwide which also contain flowline additives. The current study focuses on the effect of the flowline additives on soil physico-chemical and biological properties and quantified the impact using resilience and resistance indices. Our findings are the first to highlight deleterious effect of flowline additives by altering some fundamental soil properties, including a complete loss of structural integrity of the impacted soil and a reduced capacity to degrade hydrocarbons mainly due to: (i) phosphonate salts (in scale inhibitor) prevented accumulation of scale in pipelines but also disrupted soil physical structure; (ii) glutaraldehyde (in biocides) which repressed microbial activity in the pipeline and reduced hydrocarbon degradation in soil upon environmental exposure; (iii) the combinatory effects of these two chemicals synergistically caused severe soil structural collapse and disruption of microbial degradation of petroleum hydrocarbons.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21723652     DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2011.05.023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Pollut        ISSN: 0269-7491            Impact factor:   8.071


  1 in total

1.  The Impact of Diesel Oil Pollution on the Hydrophobicity and CO2 Efflux of Forest Soils.

Authors:  Edyta Hewelke; Jan Szatyłowicz; Piotr Hewelke; Tomasz Gnatowski; Rufat Aghalarov
Journal:  Water Air Soil Pollut       Date:  2018-02-04       Impact factor: 2.520

  1 in total

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