Demonstration of a scalable process for remediation of petroleum-impacted soil using electron beam irradiation.

Environ Pollut

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Texas A& M University, College Station, TX, 77843-3123, USA. Electronic address:

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Petroleum-impacted soils require efficient remediation, and electron beam irradiation offers a promising technique for this purpose.
  • A scalable approach using a 100 kW, 3 MeV electron beam can effectively reduce Total Petroleum Hydrocarbon (TPH) content from 3.3% to below 1% by controlling the soil exposure to specific radiation doses, achieving significant reductions at high temperatures.
  • This method demonstrates potential for rapid remediation at contaminated sites while maintaining a small equipment footprint, making it suitable for various environmental applications.

Article Abstract

Petroleum-impacted soils pose several hazards and require fast, effective, and versatile remediation techniques. Electron beam irradiation provides a novel means of heating soil and inducing non-equilibrium chemical reactions and has previously been applied to environmental remediation. In this work a scalable process for remediation of petroleum-impacted soils using a 100 kW, 3 MeV industrial electron beam is investigated. The process involves conveying impacted soil through a beam at a controllable rate to achieve a desired dose of approximately 1000 kGy. Reductions to less than 1% Total Petroleum Hydrocarbon (TPH) content from an initial TPH of 3.3% were demonstrated for doses of 710-1370 kGy. These reductions were achieved in in conditions equivalent to 4 m per hour, demonstrating the applicability of this technique to remediation sites. TPH reduction appeared to be temperature-dependent but not heavily dependent on dose rate, with reductions of 96% achieved for a dose of 1370 kGy and peak temperature of 540 °C. The performance of the process at high dose rates suggests that it can be incorporated into remediation of sites for which a high rate of material processing is required with a relatively small device footprint.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122893DOI Listing

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