Title: Bioremediation of Hydrocarbons
1Bioremediation of Hydrocarbons
Dr. Joseph Hughes Rice University
2Introduction
- Oldest and most mature application for the
bioremediation field - Range of contaminants
- Fuels, refinery wastes, coal gasification wastes,
etc. - Processes include in situ and ex-situ
- Aerobic processes dominate engineered
bioremediation of hydrocarbons - Anaerobic reactions may be critical in natural
attenuation
3Fuel Components
Aliphatics
Aromatics
4Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons
5Aerobic Biodegradation of Hydrocarbons
Hungry Microbe
Pollutants
Over simplified - and dangerous!
6Example - Benzene
- Component of fuels
- Known carcinogen
- Excellent growth substrate
- Must be dissolved!
- Metabolism requires dissolved oxygen!!!
- Metabolism requires specific enzyme!!!
7Benzene Example (cont.)
NAPL
Dissolved
Cytoplasm
oxygenase
O2
Dissolution
Diffusion
Metabolism
8Bioavailability of Hydrocarbons
- Contaminants exist in forms not directly
accessible to microorganisms - non-aqueous phase
- sorbed phase
- gas phase
- Rates of contaminant transfer controlled by
concentration gradients - Slow or incomplete transfer may limit
biodegradation
9Example Sorbed Contaminants
Sediment
Solution
10Adsorption Normalization
solution(µg/ml)
Sorbed (µg/g)
Organic carbon content (fraction)
Linear partition coefficient (ml/g)
Organic carbon normalized partition
coefficient (ml/g)
11Intra-Particle Desorption
- Soil grains contain pores
- Contaminants diffuse and sorb in
- pore spaces
- Must desorb and diffuse out before
- being accessible to bacteria
12Concentration Gradients During Biodegradation
13Potential Effects on Bioremediation
- May control rates observed
- May result in non-degraded residual
- Concentrations too low to support growth
-
- Desorption resistant compounds
- May limit application to less sorptive or
soluble compounds
?
14Partitioning between Water and Soil/Sediment
define
then
15Mass Distribution in a Soil-Water System
In-Situ/Landfarming
Slurry Reactor
16Kd Relationships
17Desorption Resistance
- Sorption and Desorption are biphasic (i.e., two
different compartments) - First compartment
- Contains larger mass of contaminant
- Proportional to foc
- Rapid desorption rate
- Second compartment
- Limited and finite capacity
- Proportional to foc
- Kinetics of release are slow
- Not available for surface reactions
18Lab Observations
19PAH Desorption
Naphthalene
Solid Phase
Aqueous Phase
Isotherm
100
Solution Phase Conc. (mg/L)
Desorption Step No.
20Qualitative Summary of Key Observations
- Sorption and desorption are both biphasic,
consisting of two compartments, each with a
finite capacity and unique equilibrium and
kinetic characteristics. - At low exposure, partial filling of both
compartments occurs. - Upon high exposure, partitioning into compartment
1 accounts for the bulk of contaminant sorption. - The soil/water partition coefficient for the 1st
compartment is proportional to the fraction of
organic carbon, fOC, and to the organic carbon
normalized partition coefficient. - Sorption to the 1st compartment is typically
found to be linear and desorption is generally
rapid. - Sorption and desorption to and from the 2nd
compartment is distinctly different from that of
the 1st compartment in, at least, four well
characterized ways. - The 2nd compartment has a well-defined maximum
sorption capacity, proportional to fOC, and
secondarily to compound-specific constants.
21Characteristics of Second Compartment
- All hydrophobic organic compounds partitioning to
this 2nd compartment are characterized by a
single organic-carbon normalized partition
coefficient. - The 2nd compartment can be saturated in one
single high exposure. - The sorption kinetics of this 2nd compartment are
generally slower than the 1st. - Contaminants sorbed in the 2nd compartment are
not available for reactions, but once desorbed
they can undergo chemical and biological
reactions as expected from the aqueous
concentration and solution conditions. - Also, The impacts of co-solvents alter the
aqueous phase activity, and these effects are
thereby predictable.
22Model Developed
23Net Effect
log Kd
24Fit to Field Observations
25From Desorption to Bioavailability
- Desorption rate and extent from desorbed
sediments is over-predicted by linear isotherm. - If biological response controlled by the
dissolved concentration of contaminant, then
SQLs may be significantly overprotective.
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27Conceptual Model of Bioavailability
Sediment
Aqueous
Organism
qlab
Klw
Biological Response
C
Ksw
qres
Uptake
Desorption
28Microbial Availability of Desorption-Resistant
PAHs
- Desorption resistance may explain the observed
recalcitrance of biodegradable hydrocarbons in
sediments and soils
29Laboratory Studies
- Sediment preparation
- naphthalene, phenanthrene, fluoranthene
- Biodegradation studies
- Enriched culture augmentation
- Control studies
- enhanced solubility, mass balance methods
30Contaminants
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34Model Predictions andExperimental Results
35T 15 days
36Surfactant Aided PAH Bioremediation
- Surfactants can increase aqueous phase
contaminant concentration - Many surfactants are toxic
- Results of laboratory and field tests either
negative (toxicity) or inconclusive
37Surfactant Example
From Tsomides, Hughes, Thomas, and Ward (1995).
Effect of Surfactant Addition on
Phenanthrene Biodegradation in SedimentsEnv.
Toxicol. and Chem., 14(6)953-959.
38Current State of Bioavailability Issue
- Incomplete biodegradation often observed in field
systems - Laboratory systems usually exhibit high extents
of degradation - Two factors, mixing and particle size
distribution appear to be critical - Surfactant addition questionable
- Most critical for low solubility, highly sorptive
contaminants
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