| Literature DB >> 29843033 |
Rishikesh Bajagain1, Sojin Lee1, Seung-Woo Jeong2.
Abstract
This study investigated a persulfate-bioaugmentation serial foam spraying technique to remove total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPHs) present in diesel-contaminated unsaturated soil. Feeding of remedial agents by foam spraying increased the infiltration/unsaturated hydraulic conductivity of reagents into the unsaturated soil. Persulfate mixed with a surfactant solution infiltrated the soil faster than peroxide, resulting in relatively even soil moisture content. Persulfate had a higher soil infiltration tendency, which would facilitate its distribution over a wide soil area, thereby enhancing subsequent biodegradation efficiency. Nearly 80% of soil-TPHs were degraded by combined persulfate-bioaugmentation foam spraying, while bioaugmentation foam spraying alone removed 52%. TPH fraction analysis revealed that the removal rate for the biodegradation recalcitrant fraction (C18 to C22) in deeper soil regions was higher for persulfate-bioaugmentation serial foam application than for peroxide-bioaugmentation foam application. Persulfate-foam spraying may be superior to peroxide for TPH removal even at a low concentration (50 mN) because persulfate-foam is more permeable, persistent, and does not change soil pH in the subsurface. Although the number of soil microbes declines by oxidation pretreatment, bioaugmentation-foam alters the microbial population exponentially.Entities:
Keywords: Bioaugmentation; Diesel-contaminated soil; Hydrogen peroxide; Soil moisture content; Surfactant foam; Total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH)
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29843033 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.05.081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086