Literature DB >> 26891352

Effects of adding bulking agent, inorganic nutrient and microbial inocula on biopile treatment for oil-field drilling waste.

Jie Ma1, Yongqi Yang2, Xiaoli Dai2, Yetong Chen2, Hanmei Deng2, Huijun Zhou2, Shaohui Guo1, Guangxu Yan3.   

Abstract

Contamination from oil-field drilling waste is a worldwide environmental problem. This study investigated the performance of four bench-scale biopiles in treating drilling waste: 1) direct biopile (DW), 2) biopile plus oil-degrading microbial consortium (DW + M), 3) biopile plus microbial consortium and bulking agents (saw dust) (DW + M + BA), 4) biopile plus microbial consortium, bulking agents, and inorganic nutrients (Urea and K2HPO4) (DW + M + BA + N). Ninety days of biopiling removed 41.0%, 44.0%, 55.7% and 87.4% of total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) in the pile "DW", "DW + M", "DW + M + BA", and "DW + M + BA + N" respectively. Addition of inorganic nutrient and bulking agents resulted in a 56.9% and 26.6% increase in TPH removal efficiency respectively. In contrast, inoculation of hydrocarbon-degrading microorganisms only slightly enhanced the contaminant removal (increased 7.3%). The biopile with stronger contaminant removal also had higher pile temperature and lower pile pH (e.g., in "DW + M + BA + N"). GC-MS analysis shows that biopiling significantly reduced the total number of detected contaminants and changed the chemical composition. Overall, this study shows that biopiling is an effective remediation technology for drilling waste. Adding inorganic nutrients and bulking agents can significantly improve biopile performance while addition of microbial inocula had minimal positive impacts on contaminant removal.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Compost; Drilling mud; Groundwater; Oily sludge; Petroleum; Soil

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26891352     DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2016.01.123

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chemosphere        ISSN: 0045-6535            Impact factor:   7.086


  2 in total

1.  Impact of Petroleum Contamination on the Structure of Saline Soil Bacterial Communities.

Authors:  Ying Zhang; Xiaojie Sun; Cheng Qian; Lin Li; Xiufang Shang; Xinfeng Xiao; Yu Gao
Journal:  Curr Microbiol       Date:  2022-10-08       Impact factor: 2.343

2.  Effect of immature and mature compost addition on petroleum contaminated soils composting: kinetics.

Authors:  Mahdi Farzadkia; Ali Esrafili; Mitra Gholami; Ali Koolivand
Journal:  J Environ Health Sci Eng       Date:  2019-11-08
  2 in total

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