4.6 Article

Ammonium Concentrations in Produced Waters from a Mesothermic Oil Field Subjected to Nitrate Injection Decrease through Formation of Denitrifying Biomass and Anammox Activity

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 76, Issue 15, Pages 4977-4987

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.00596-10

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSERC
  2. Baker Hughes Incorporated, Commercial Microbiology Limited (Intertek)
  3. Computer Modeling Group Limited
  4. ConocoPhillips Company
  5. Aramco Services
  6. Shell Canada Limited
  7. Suncor Energy Developments Inc.
  8. Yara International ASA
  9. Alberta Innovates-Energy and Environment Solutions
  10. ERC [232937]
  11. YPF SA
  12. European Research Council (ERC) [232937] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Community analysis of a mesothermic oil field, subjected to continuous field-wide injection of nitrate to remove sulfide, with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA genes indicated the presence of heterotrophic and sulfide-oxidizing, nitrate-reducing bacteria (hNRB and soNRB). These reduce nitrate by dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (e.g., Sulfurospirillum and Denitrovibrio) or by denitrification (e.g., Sulfurimonas, Arcobacter, and Thauera). Monitoring of ammonium concentrations in producing wells (PWs) indicated that denitrification was the main pathway for nitrate reduction in the field: breakthrough of nitrate and nitrite in two PWs was not associated with an increase in the ammonium concentration, and no increase in the ammonium concentration was seen in any of 11 producing wells during periods of increased nitrate injection. Instead, ammonium concentrations in produced waters decreased on average from 0.3 to 0.2 mM during 2 years of nitrate injection. Physiological studies with produced water-derived hNRB microcosms indicated increased biomass formation associated with denitrification as a possible cause for decreasing ammonium concentrations. Use of anammox-specific primers and cloning of the resulting PCR product gave clones affiliated with the known anammox genera Candidatus Brocadia and Candidatus Kuenenia, indicating that the anammox reaction may also contribute to declining ammonium concentrations. Overall, the results indicate the following: (i) that nitrate injected into an oil field to oxidize sulfide is primarily reduced by denitrifying bacteria, of which many genera have been identified by DGGE, and (ii) that perhaps counterintuitively, nitrate injection leads to decreasing ammonium concentrations in produced waters.

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