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Contaminated land: dealing with hydrocarbon contamination

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Title: Contaminated land: dealing with hydrocarbon contamination


1
Contaminated land dealing with hydrocarbon
contamination
  • Petroleum hydrocarbons occurrence, composition
    and significance

2
Contents of presentation
  • Sources of hydrocarbon contamination
  • Composition of oils
  • Non-hydrocarbon components of oil
  • Hydrocarbon behaviour in the subsurface
  • The most important components?

3
Potential hydrocarbon-contaminated sites 1
  • Stating the obvious
  • Filling stations, distribution depots
  • Oil production, refineries and associated
  • Garages/automotive industry
  • Haulage yards
  • Scrap metal industry
  • Airports, aerospace industry
  • Waste processing disposal

4
Potential hydrocarbon-contaminated sites 2
  • And also
  • Gasworks
  • Metalworking industry
  • Paints/inks/coatings industry
  • Anybody who uses solvents!
  • Agricultural facilities
  • Anywhere with a boilerhouse/ furnace
  • Including domestic oil storage

5
Composition of oils
  • Crude oil and petroleum products are complex
    mixtures
  • They are characterised by differing boiling point
    ranges and components
  • Carbon numbers/simulated distillation

6
Oil refining
Gasoline C4-C10 (80oC - 150oC)
Kerosene/Jet Fuel C11-C13 (150oC - 250oC)
Diesel Fuel C14-C18 (250oC - 325oC)
Crude Oil
Heavy Gas Oil C19-C25 (325oC - 450oC)
Lubricating Oil C26-C40 (450oC - 500oC)
Residuum gtC40 (gt 500oC)
7
Main component groups
  • Aliphatic hydrocarbons
  • Aromatic hydrocarbons
  • NSO components
  • Nitrogen, sulphur and oxygen-containing compounds
  • Polar components
  • Asphaltenes

8
Aliphatic hydrocarbons
Alkanes Saturated hydrocarbons - no double or
triple bonds. (Paraffins) Hexane
Alkenes/ Unsaturated hydrocarbons -
double/triple bonds. Alkynes (Olefins) Hexene
Cycloalkanes Saturated hydrocarbons with a ring
structure. (Naphthenes) Cyclohexane
9
Aromatic hydrocarbons - BTEX
Benzene o-Xylene C6H6
C8H11 Toluene m-Xylene C7H8
C8H11 Ethylbenzene p-Xylene C8H10
C8H11
3
10
Aromatic hydrocarbons PAHs
11
Relative distribution of components an example
12
Hydrocarbon behaviour in the subsurface
  • Oil is a light non-aqueous phase liquid (LNAPL)
  • Residual oil will be held in pore spaces in soil
  • Free oil floats on groundwater
  • The more soluble components can dissolve in
    groundwater
  • MTBE TAME are highly soluble
  • The more volatile components can partition into
    soil gas
  • Sorption of components into/onto soil can be an
    important process

13
How oil components might be distributed
Petrol Spill
soil surface
Before Oil Flow Through Soil
vadose zone
During Oil Flow Through Soil
capillary fringe
water table
saturated zone
groundwater flow
14
NAPL how?
Oil in closed-end pore
Residual oil trapped by water
Soil Matrix
Soil Matrix
NAPL
NAPL
Trapped NAPL
Wetting Fluid (water)
15
Why is NAPL important?
  • Direct effects of oil at receptor
  • Also potential effect on buried materials
  • Residual NAPL can also be a source of
    contamination for long periods of time
  • Water soluble components can cause long-term
    groundwater plumes
  • Volatile components are a potential source of
    vapours

16
Petroleum contamination what to look for
  • Liquid phase (free-product NAPL)
  • Dissolved phase (groundwater plume)
  • Solid phase (hydrocarbon attached to soil)
  • Vapour phase
  • Combination of several phases

17
How oil components might be distributed example
18
Non-hydrocarbon components
  • Organic additives
  • Petrol (gasoline) MTBE, TAME
  • Fuels proprietary performance additives
  • Luboils proprietary performance additives
  • Metals
  • Naturally occurring components of crude
  • e.g., vanadium, nickel
  • Significant contaminants in waste luboils
  • Leaded petrol (TEL)
  • Max. 0.013 g/l in 1980s leaded petrol but
    earlier or special use petrol could be higher
  • Proprietary performance additives

19
Additives in unleaded petrol
MTBE Methyl tertiary butyl ether
TAME Tertiary methyl amyl ether
ETBE Ethyl tertiary butyl ether
  • MTBE most common in UK
  • Typically 1-5 in petrol
  • Highly soluble (26000 mg/l)
  • Very low taste/odour threshold

20
Weathering
  • Preferential reduction in the concentration of
    some components relative to others
  • Biodegradation tends to favour removal of
    n-alkanes (straight carbon chain alkanes), low
    molecular weight cycloalkanes and light aromatics
  • Volatilisation and dissolution tends to remove
    low molecular weight aromatics (especially BTEX)
    and aliphatics
  • Dissolution is very important for MTBE and TAME
  • Weathering of organic lead additives

21
Weathering aliphatic components
  • So, weathered hydrocarbon mixtures are typically
    significantly less mobile and less toxic than
    fresh mixtures

22
Summary
  • Hydrocarbon contamination may arise at a wide
    variety of sites
  • Crude oils and petroleum products are complex
    mixtures of components
  • We will discuss the implications further in more
    detail
  • Multiphase behaviour must be considered
  • Weathering may be important

23
The most important components?
  • Certain groups of components often merit
    particular (but not sole) consideration, e.g.
  • BTEX
  • Toxicity, vapours
  • PAHs
  • Potential carcinogenicity, relatively persistent
  • BUT this depends on the source-pathway-receptor
    relationships that you are considering
  • Is the conceptual model sound?
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