模型芳烃萘和苯的吸附和解吸:温度和土壤成分的影响

B. Shi, S. Ngueleu, F. Rezanezhad, S. Slowinski, G. Pronk, C. Smeaton, K. Stevenson, R. Al-Raoush, P. Van Cappellen
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引用次数: 12

摘要

石油碳氢化合物(PHC)污染是一个全球性的环境问题。了解控制PHC在土壤和含水层中命运和流动的关键因素和机制,对于环境风险评估、制定补救策略和政策决策至关重要。本研究的重点是土壤成分和温度对萘和苯这两种具有代表性的芳香PHC化合物吸附和解吸的影响。实验使用人工沙壤土混合物进行,温度范围为3至25°C。正如预期的那样,土壤的吸附能力主要受有机碳含量的控制,而几乎不受粘土含量的影响。苯和萘的吸附数据遵循线性到接近线性的等温线。随着温度的降低,萘的吸附量进一步增加,而温度对苯的吸附影响不大。后者与苯的吸附焓的极小值一致。在施加的动态温度波动下,萘的吸附和解吸是可逆的:模型模拟表明,依赖温度的土壤水分分配的动力学限制最小。我们的研究结果表明,即使在简单的人工土壤系统中,温度变化也会对PHC的土壤孔隙水分配产生复杂但可预测的影响,从而影响其流动性和生物利用度。因此,了解温度的作用是解开调节PHC在现实世界土壤中命运的非生物和生物耦合过程的先决条件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sorption and Desorption of the Model Aromatic Hydrocarbons Naphthalene and Benzene: Effects of Temperature and Soil Composition
Petroleum hydrocarbon (PHC) contamination is a global environmental issue. Understanding the key factors and mechanisms controlling the fate and mobility of PHCs in soils and aquifers is critical for environmental risk assessment, the development of remediation strategies, and policy decisions. This study focuses on the effects of soil composition and temperature on the sorption and desorption of two representative aromatic PHC compounds: naphthalene and benzene. The experiments were carried out using artificial sandy loam soil mixtures with temperatures ranging from 3 to 25°C. As expected, the sorption capacities of the soils were primarily controlled by the organic carbon content, while barely affected by the clay content. The sorption data for benzene and naphthalene followed linear to near-linear isotherms. Naphthalene sorption further increased with decreasing temperature, whereas temperature had little effect on benzene sorption. The latter was consistent with the very small magnitude of the sorption enthalpy of benzene. Under imposed dynamic temperature fluctuations, naphthalene sorption and desorption were shown to be reversible: model simulations demonstrated minimal kinetic limitation of the temperature-dependent soil-water partitioning. Our results imply that even in simple artificial soil systems, temperature variations can have complex, but predictable, effects on the soil-pore water partitioning of PHCs and, hence, on their mobility and bioavailability. Understanding the role of temperature is thus a prerequisite to unraveling the coupled abiotic and biotic processes that modulate the fate of PHCs in real-world soils.
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