Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics

Due to the drastic effect of produced water on the environment and its large quantity produced by the oil and gas industry, produced water treatment is a significantly growing challenge that requires serious attention. Produced water can be used as unconventional source of water in arid regions for...

وصف كامل

محفوظ في:
التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
المؤلف الرئيسي: Ghaleb, Hala (author)
مؤلفون آخرون: Ali, Jisha (author), Arangadi, Abdul (author), Le, Tu Phuong Pham (author), Moraetis, Daniel (author), Pavlopoulos, Kosmas (author), Alhseinat, Emad (author)
منشور في: 2023
الموضوعات:
الوصول للمادة أونلاين:https://depot.sorbonne.ae/handle/20.500.12458/1378
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author Ghaleb, Hala
author2 Ali, Jisha
Arangadi, Abdul
Le, Tu Phuong Pham
Moraetis, Daniel
Pavlopoulos, Kosmas
Alhseinat, Emad
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author_facet Ghaleb, Hala
Ali, Jisha
Arangadi, Abdul
Le, Tu Phuong Pham
Moraetis, Daniel
Pavlopoulos, Kosmas
Alhseinat, Emad
author_role author
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Ghaleb, Hala
Ali, Jisha
Arangadi, Abdul
Le, Tu Phuong Pham
Moraetis, Daniel
Pavlopoulos, Kosmas
Alhseinat, Emad
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2023-01-06T06:07:35Z
2023-01-06T06:07:35Z
2023
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv 10.1016/j.eti.2022.102993
2352-1864
https://depot.sorbonne.ae/handle/20.500.12458/1378
10.1016/j.eti.2022.102993
dc.language.none.fl_str_mv en
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv Environmental Technology & Innovation
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Soil aquifer treatment
Adsorption
Heavy metal removal
2D COS-FTIR
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv Controlled Vocabulary for Resource Type Genres::text::periodical::journal::contribution to journal::journal article
description Due to the drastic effect of produced water on the environment and its large quantity produced by the oil and gas industry, produced water treatment is a significantly growing challenge that requires serious attention. Produced water can be used as unconventional source of water in arid regions for underground water aquifer recharging through soil aquifer treatment (SAT), however, this requires sophisticated studies to avoid the contamination of the underground water. The present study investigates the efficacy of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for removing heavy metals and dissolved organic that are common contaminants in oil produced water. The removal of performance of soil samples has been evaluated on the laboratory scale at neutral pH at room temperature using synthetic oil produced water which contains heavy metals (Ni and Zn) and dissolved organics (phenol). The various experimental parameters were monitored and results indicated the sandstone displayed the highest removal of 98%–99% for both heavy metals and 26% for phenol than sand. The experimental data were fitted using four isotherm models, the Langmuir adsorption isotherm, the Freundlich isotherm, the Temkin isotherm model and the D–R isotherm. The Langmuir adsorption isotherm fitted well in a monolayer adsorption conceptual model on sand and sandstone. Kinetic modelling and analysis indicated that both soil samples followed the pseudo-second- order kinetics for metal ions and phenol. The 2D-COS FTIR was applied to analyse the interaction mechanism between the contaminants and sand and sandstone particles. The asymmetric Si–O band in sand minerals plays the prime response in Ni and Zn removal mechanisms whereas the asymmetric CO2−3 band decides for the removal mechanisms in sandstone. In the case of phenol adsorption, the interaction between phenol and Si–O bond is the predominant mechanism. Overall, these results summarize that sand and sandstone are effective for heavy metals removal than dissolved organic compounds.
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identifier_str_mv 10.1016/j.eti.2022.102993
2352-1864
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network_acronym_str sorbonner
network_name_str Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi repository
oai_identifier_str oai:depot.sorbonne.ae:20.500.12458/1378
publishDate 2023
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spelling Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organicsGhaleb, HalaAli, JishaArangadi, AbdulLe, Tu Phuong PhamMoraetis, DanielPavlopoulos, KosmasAlhseinat, EmadSoil aquifer treatmentAdsorptionHeavy metal removal2D COS-FTIRDue to the drastic effect of produced water on the environment and its large quantity produced by the oil and gas industry, produced water treatment is a significantly growing challenge that requires serious attention. Produced water can be used as unconventional source of water in arid regions for underground water aquifer recharging through soil aquifer treatment (SAT), however, this requires sophisticated studies to avoid the contamination of the underground water. The present study investigates the efficacy of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for removing heavy metals and dissolved organic that are common contaminants in oil produced water. The removal of performance of soil samples has been evaluated on the laboratory scale at neutral pH at room temperature using synthetic oil produced water which contains heavy metals (Ni and Zn) and dissolved organics (phenol). The various experimental parameters were monitored and results indicated the sandstone displayed the highest removal of 98%–99% for both heavy metals and 26% for phenol than sand. The experimental data were fitted using four isotherm models, the Langmuir adsorption isotherm, the Freundlich isotherm, the Temkin isotherm model and the D–R isotherm. The Langmuir adsorption isotherm fitted well in a monolayer adsorption conceptual model on sand and sandstone. Kinetic modelling and analysis indicated that both soil samples followed the pseudo-second- order kinetics for metal ions and phenol. The 2D-COS FTIR was applied to analyse the interaction mechanism between the contaminants and sand and sandstone particles. The asymmetric Si–O band in sand minerals plays the prime response in Ni and Zn removal mechanisms whereas the asymmetric CO2−3 band decides for the removal mechanisms in sandstone. In the case of phenol adsorption, the interaction between phenol and Si–O bond is the predominant mechanism. Overall, these results summarize that sand and sandstone are effective for heavy metals removal than dissolved organic compounds.2023-01-06T06:07:35Z2023-01-06T06:07:35Z2023Controlled Vocabulary for Resource Type Genres::text::periodical::journal::contribution to journal::journal articleapplication/pdf10.1016/j.eti.2022.1029932352-1864https://depot.sorbonne.ae/handle/20.500.12458/137810.1016/j.eti.2022.102993enEnvironmental Technology & Innovationoai:depot.sorbonne.ae:20.500.12458/13782024-02-14T12:16:24Z
spellingShingle Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics
Ghaleb, Hala
Soil aquifer treatment
Adsorption
Heavy metal removal
2D COS-FTIR
title Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics
title_full Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics
title_fullStr Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics
title_full_unstemmed Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics
title_short Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics
title_sort Comprehensive assessment of the capacity of sand and sandstone from aquifer vadose zone for the removal of heavy metals and dissolved organics
topic Soil aquifer treatment
Adsorption
Heavy metal removal
2D COS-FTIR
url https://depot.sorbonne.ae/handle/20.500.12458/1378