| Literature DB >> 23864952 |
Laurence N Warr1, André Friese, Florian Schwarz, Frieder Schauer, Ralph J Portier, Laura M Basirico, Gregory M Olson.
Abstract
Much class="Chemical">oil sclass="Chemical">pill research has foEntities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23864952 PMCID: PMC3705877 DOI: 10.1155/2013/704806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Res Int ISSN: 2090-3146
Figure 1NASA's Terra satellite image of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill (light grey area) on May 17th, 2010, at 12:40 PM. The point marks the site of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform that sank on April 20th, 2010 (source http://www.nasa.gov/home/index.html).
Summary of the hydrocarbon analyses by GC/MS showing the totals (mg/kg) of alkane and PAH contents, as well as totals (mg/kg) of BaP-TEQ and MEQ-TEQ indicators.
| (0) | (1) | (2) | (3) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Original source | Gulf coast water | Gulf coast water | Gulf coast water | |
| Oil* | Oil | Oil + fertilizer | Oil + fertilized clay | |
| Total alkanes (mg/kg) | 6422.0 | 1123.7 | 267.4 | 130.0 |
| Total PAH (mg/kg) | 216.0 | 122.0 | 101.5 | 126.5 |
| Total BaP-TEQ (mg/kg) | 2.8 | 1.3 | 1.9 | 1.8 |
| Total BaP-MEQ (mg/kg) | 2.0 | 1.2 | 1.1 | 1.5 |
*Average of 2 sample analyses.
Figure 2(a) Pipetting of clay-in-suspension (2 mL) drops onto plastic foil. (b) Removal of clay flakes after drying. (c) Placement of clay flakes onto the surface of the oil layer. (d) Continuous shaking of the sample containers on a shaking table during the 1 month duration of the experiment (100 motions per minute).
O2 concentrations (ml/L) in solution (shown in Figure 3) measured over a period of 100 hours. The samples (1–3) were extracted and measured 24 hours after O2 flushing of the gas-tight batch experiments.
| (1) | (2) | (3) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gulf coast water | Gulf coast water | Gulf coast water | |
| Oil | Oil | Oil | |
| Fertilizer | Fertilized clay | ||
| Start O2 (ml/L) | 6.22 | 1.11 | 5.09 |
| Time to half O2 | 4.4 hr | 1 hr | <15 min |
| Time to 0.01 ml/L | 86.5 hr | 9 hr | 5 hr |
| Rate enhancement | Control | ×4.4 | >17.6 |
| Observations (after 2 months) | Clear water with floating clumps of oil | Brown turbid water with thick oil coatings on wall of container | Brown turbid water with oil droplets |
Figure 3O2 depletion curves (mL/L) measured in 7 mL of Gulf coast water taken from the experimental beakers after 1 month of reaction time. Prior to sampling, the beakers were flushed with pure O2 gas and left for 24 hours to equilibrate.
71 alkane and PAH compounds quantified using a modified GC/MS method.
| Internal standard | n-Alkanes | n-Alkanes | PAHs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Napthalene-d8 | nC-10 Decane | nC-22 Docosane | Naphthalene, C1–C4* |
| Acenaphthene-d10 | nC-11 Undecane | nC-23 Tricosane | Fluorene, C1–C3* |
| Chrysene-d12 | nC-12 Dodecane | nC-24 Tetracosane | Dibenzothiophene, C1–C3* |
| Perylene-d12 | nC-13 Tridecane | nC-25 Pentacosane | Phenanthrene, C1–C4* |
| Surrogate Standard | nC-14 Tetradecane | nC-26 Hexacosane | Anthracene |
| Phenanthrene-d10 | nC-15 Pentadecane | nC-27 Heptacosane | Fluoranthene |
| Androstane | nC-16 Hexadecane | nC-28 Octacosane | Pyrene, C1–C4* |
| nC-17 Heptadecane | nC-29 Nonacosane | NBT, C1–C3* | |
| Pristane | nC-30 Triacontane | Benzo (a) Anthracene | |
| nC-18 Octadecane | nC-31 Hentriacontane | Chrysene, C1–C4* | |
| Phytane | nC-32 Dotriacontane | Benzo (b) Fluoranthene | |
| nC-19 Nonadecane | nC-33 Tritriacontane | Benzo (k) Fluoranthene | |
| nC-20 Eicosane | nC-34 Tetratriacontane | Benzo (e) Pyrene | |
| nC-21 Heneicosane | nC-35 Pentatriacontane | Benzo (a) Pyrene | |
| Perylene | |||
| Indeno (1,2,3-cd) Pyrene | |||
| Dibenzo (a,h) anthracene | |||
| Benzo (g,h,i) perylene |
*Indicates parent compound and associated homologues.
Figure 4Photograph of a floating fertilized clay flake within Deepwater Horizon oil and Gulf coast water taken after 3 weeks of agitation. The clay flake is 3 cm in diameter. The circular dark patches on the base of flakes are clumps of oil. The brown furry mass attached to the flake consists of biofilm-clay-oil flocculates that slowly sink to form an organic-rich mud on the bottom of the beaker.
Figure 5Transmission electron microscope image and selective elemental maps for C, P, and N of the clay-treated oil showing relationships between bacteria, oil, and palygorskite (Pg) clay mineral particles. Weight (%) element composition of analysis A (bacterial cell) in decreasing abundance is C 26%, O 28%, Na 18%, K 10%, N 5%, Si 4%, S 3%, Mg 2%, Ca 1%, Cl, Al, P, and Fe each >1%. Weight (%) element composition of analysis B (biofilm) in decreasing abundance is C 28% O 16%, Na 8%, K 17%, Cl 14%, N 7%, S 5%, Si 2%, Mg 1%, Ca 1%, Al, and P each <1%.