Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Bi H" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Assessing the performance of a surface washing agent for oil removal from sand in cold environments Sui J; Bi H; Yue R; Fu H; Yang A; An C; 41544565
ENCS
2 Unraveling the resuspension and transformation of stranded oil: Mechanisms driving oil-particle aggregate formation in intertidal zones Yang X; Bi H; Huang G; Zhang H; Lyu L; An C; 40544777
ENCS
3 Oil spills in coastal regions of the Arctic and Subarctic: Environmental impacts, response tactics, and preparedness Bi H; Wang Z; Yue R; Sui J; Mulligan CN; Lee K; Pegau S; Chen Z; An C; 39689468
ENCS
4 Exploring the glycoprotein washing fluid-assisted cleanup for the restoration of oil-contaminated shorelines with environmental integrity Sui J; Yue R; Bi H; Fu H; Yang A; Wang M; An C; 39260515
ENCS
5 Spotlight on the vertical migration of aged microplastics in coastal waters Yang X; Huang G; Chen Z; Feng Q; An C; Lyu L; Bi H; Zhou S; 38503206
ENCS
6 Unveiling the Vertical Migration of Microplastics with Suspended Particulate Matter in the Estuarine Environment: Roles of Salinity, Particle Properties, and Hydrodynamics Yang X; Huang G; Feng Q; An C; Zhou S; Bi H; Lyu L; 38306690
ENCS
7 Towards environmentally sustainable management: A review on the generation, degradation, and recycling of polypropylene face mask waste Lyu L; Bagchi M; Markoglou N; An C; Peng H; Bi H; Yang X; Sun H; 37742382
ENCS
8 An insight into the benefits of substituting polypropylene with biodegradable polylactic acid face masks for combating environmental emissions Lyu L; Peng H; An C; Sun H; Yang X; Bi H; 37734618
ENCS
9 Assessment of the infiltration of water-in-oil emulsion into soil after spill incidents Qu Z; An C; Yue R; Bi H; Zhao S; 37414189
ENCS
10 Preparation, characteristics, and performance of the microemulsion system in the removal of oil from beach sand Bi H; Mulligan CN; Lee K; An C; Wen J; Yang X; Lyu L; Qu Z; 37399736
ENCS
11 A multi-criteria decision-making (MCDM) approach for data-driven distance learning recommendations Alshamsi AM; El-Kassabi H; Serhani MA; Bouhaddioui C; 36718426
ENCS
12 A flexible robust model for blood supply chain network design problem Khalilpourazari S; Hashemi Doulabi H; 35474752
ENCS
13 Cleanup of oiled shorelines using a dual responsive nanoclay/sodium alginate surface washing agent Yue R; An C; Ye Z; Bi H; Chen Z; Liu X; Zhang X; Lee K; 34906587
ENCS
14 Exploring the use of alginate hydrogel coating as a new initiative for emergent shoreline oiling prevention Bi H; An C; Mulligan CN; Wang Z; Zhang B; Lee K; 34346356
ENCS
15 Designing a hybrid reinforcement learning based algorithm with application in prediction of the COVID-19 pandemic in Quebec. Khalilpourazari S, Hashemi Doulabi H 33424076
ENCS
16 Investigation into the oil removal from sand using a surface washing agent under different environmental conditions. Bi H, An C, Chen X, Owens E, Lee K 32829266
ENCS

 

Title:Assessment of the infiltration of water-in-oil emulsion into soil after spill incidents
Authors:Qu ZAn CYue RBi HZhao S
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37414189/
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165325
Publication:The Science of the total environment
Keywords:Environmental conditionsModelingOil spillSoil infiltrationWater-in-oil emulsion
PMID:37414189 Category: Date Added:2023-07-07
Dept Affiliation: ENCS

Description:

The issue of inland oil spills exerts an adverse impact on environmental and ecological health. Many cases are concerned with water-in-oil emulsions, especially in the oil production and transport system. To understand the contamination and take an efficient response work after spill, this study investigated the infiltration behavior of water-in-oil emulsions and the influencing factors by measuring the characteristics of different emulsions. The results showed that an increase of water and fine particle content and decrease in temperature would improve the viscosity of emulsions and reduce the infiltration rate, whereas salinity levels had a negligible impact on infiltration if the pour point of emulsion systems was far higher than the freezing point of water droplets. It is worth mentioning that excessive water content at a high temperature may cause demulsification during the infiltration process. The oil concentration in different soil layers was related to the viscosity of emulsion and infiltration depth, and the adopted Green-Ampt model simulated well under low temperature. This study reveals the new features of emulsion infiltration behavior and distribution patterns under different conditions and is helpful for the response work after spill accidents.





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