4.1 Article

Geoelectrical Measurements to Monitor a Hydrocarbon Leakage in the Aquifer: Simulation Experiment in the Lab

Journal

GEOSCIENCES
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/geosciences12100360

Keywords

cross-hole electrical resistivity tomography; hydrocarbon leakage; LNAPL; biodegradation

Funding

  1. Basilicata Region, Progetto PO FSE Basilicata 2007-2013: Promozione della ricerca e dell'innovazione e sviluppo di relazioni con il sistema produttivo regionale [796/2013, 15/AP/05/2013/REG]

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Hydrocarbons pose a significant contamination risk to environmental resources, and conventional direct measurements have limited spatial coverage. Geophysics provides additional information to support conventional methods and has been widely used to detect the presence and distribution of hydrocarbons in the subsurface. Electrical resistivity tomography is an effective geophysical technique for studying hydrocarbon contamination. Experimental results demonstrate the ability of electrical resistivity tomography to monitor biodegradation processes and inform remediation activities.
Hydrocarbons represent one of the most dangerous sources of contamination for environmental resources. Petroleum contaminants released from leaking fuel storage tanks or accidental spillages represent serious worldwide problems. Knowledge of the contaminant distribution in the subsoil is very complex, and direct measurements, such as boreholes or drillings, are strongly required. Even if the direct measurements define accurate information, on the contrary, they have low spatial coverage. Geophysics can effectively support conventional methods of subsoil sampling by expanding the information obtainable, providing to analyze, with higher resolution, larger areas of investigation. Consequently, different geophysical techniques have been used to detect the presence and distribution of hydrocarbons in the subsurface. Electrical resistivity tomography is an efficient geophysical methodology for studying hydrocarbon contamination. Indeed, this methodology allows for the reduction of the number of drillings or soil samples, and several papers described its success. One of the advantages is the possibility to successfully perform analyses in time-lapse to identify the degradation of the contaminants. Indeed, natural attenuation of hydrocarbon contaminants is observed under aerobic conditions due to biodegradation, which should be the principal phenomenon of physical variations of the subsoil. Therefore, a laboratory experiment was conducted in a sandbox to simulate a spillage of common diesel occurring in the vadose zone. The sandbox was monitored for a long period (1 year, approximately) using time-lapse cross borehole electrical resistivity tomographies. Results highlight the usefulness of in-hole electrical tomography for characterizing underground hydrocarbon leakage and the variability of the subsurface physical behavior due to contaminant degradation. Therefore, the experiment demonstrates how the electrical method can monitor the biodegradation processes occurring in the subsoil, defining the possibility of using the methodology during remediation activities.

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