4.7 Article

Biosurfactant-enhanced removal of total petroleum hydrocarbons from contaminated soil

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 167, Issue 1-3, Pages 609-614

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2009.01.017

Keywords

Biosurfactant; Oil-contaminated soil; Rhamnolipids; Surfactin; Total petroleum hydrocarbon

Funding

  1. Ministry of Economic Affairs of Taiwan [96-EC-17-A-10-10-S1-013]
  2. Department of Environmental Engineering, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan

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A screening method was developed to evaluate the oil removal capability of biosurfactants for oil-contaminated soils collected from a heavy oil-polluted site. The ability of removing total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) from soil by two biosurfactants was identified and compared with that of synthetic surfactants. The results show that biosurfactants exhibited much higher TPH removal efficiency than the synthetic ones examined. By using 0.2 mass% of rhamnolipids. surfactin, Tween 80, and Triton X-100, the TPH removal for the soil contaminated with ca. 3,000 mg TPH/kg dry soil was 23%, 14%, 6%, and 4%, respectively, while removal efficiency increased to 63%, 62%, 40%, and 35%, respectively, for the soil contaminated with ca. 9000 mg TPH/kg dry soil. The TPH removal efficiency also increased with an increase in biosurfactant concentration (from 0 to 0.2 mass%) but it did not vary significantly for the contact time of 1 and 7 days. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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