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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Potential and Limits of Aerobic and
Anaerobic BTEX Biodegradation in Aquifers
By
Mobil Exploration and Producing Company
It is now well established that a major factor
of the intrinsic containment and mass
decline of plumes of the aromatic hydrocarbons
benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene,
and xylene (BTEX) from fuel spills to subsurface
aquifers is the inherent and ubiquitous
degradative activity of
soil
microbes
on these compounds. The availability of
dissolved oxygen (DO) through the processes
of aquifer reaeration (groundwater
flow, rainfall events, capillary fringe aeration)
is also essential for stimulating aerobic
biodegradation of BTEX.
In recent years, laboratory experiments with
aquifer sediments have shown that BTEX
may be biodegraded at significant rates by
anaerobic bacteria utilizing alternate electron
acceptors (EA), e.g., NO3-, Fe+3, SO4-2,
and CO2. These findings have prompted
us to investigate three laboratory
soil
/
groundwater systems (aerobic, anaerobic,
and chronic low DO) which may represent
field plume conditions. When aquifer sediments
were equilibrated with sufficient DO,
hydrocarbons (BTEX) were also degraded
at high rates with no lag phase. Experimental
simulations of chronic low DO, a
condition common in low permeability
aquifers, were performed in a pressure-transducer-
controlled respirometer in
which the DO was maintained at constant
low levels (less than 1 to 2 mg/L). BTEX
also degraded rapidly at all DO levels.
These results suggest that plumes that appear
to have low DO but continuous oxygen
infiltration significantly bioattenuate
BTEX. In addition, this model for an O2-
diffusion-limited aquifer may not be
anaerobic, but may represent stable, slowly
degrading aerobic plumes. The anaerobic
biotransformation potential of BTEX was
also determined in microcosms prepared
with subsoil or groundwater amended with
NO3-, Fe+3, SO4-2, or no EA. Groundwater
from the "aerobic" and "anaerobic" portions
of one site plume showed losses in
BTEX, but no correlation existed between
the presence of reduced EA and biodegradation.
Anaerobic slurries of subsoil from
another site showed significant BTEX declines,
but reduced gases (CH4, H2S, H2)
were not formed. In these microcosms,
however, high concentrations of
soil
-bound
(not dissolved) Fe+2 formed, suggesting that Fe+3 may have been a predominant anaerobic
EA. Our data indicate that the presumed
consumption/reduction of anaerobic EA
may not always be coupled to BTEX losses
in groundwater plumes. Finally, these results
suggest a more critical evaluation of
natural attenuation in aquifers is needed
regarding O2 transport mechanisms and the
extent of anaerobic BTEX biodegradation.
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