Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Oil spill" Keyword-tagged 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 Development, Testing, and Application of an Enhanced Oil Spill Model for Ice-Covered Waters (OSMT-Ice) through Multiscale Field Experiments Yang Z; Chen Z; Lee K; 40845360
ENCS
3 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
4 Konjac glucomannan (KGM) aerogel immobilized microalgae: A new way for marine oil spills remediation Wang X; Du Z; Song Z; Liu M; He P; Feng L; Chen Z; Chen Q; 40381443
ENCS
5 GOOSM: A GIS-based offshore oil spill management tool for enhanced response and preparedness Yang Z; Chen Z; Lee K; 40279774
ENCS
6 Effect of konjac glucomannan aerogel-immobilized Chlorella vulgaris LH-1 on oil-contaminated seawater remediation and endogenous bacterial community diversity Du Z; Wang X; Song Z; Zhu B; Feng L; Chen Z; Chen Q; 39853794
ENCS
7 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
8 Assessment of risk for aromatic hydrocarbons resulting from subsea Blowouts: A case study in eastern Canada Yang Z; Chen Z; Xin Q; Lee K; 39571296
ENCS
9 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
10 Managing deepsea oil spills through a systematic modeling approach Chen Z; Yang Z; Lee K; Lu Y; 38759562
ENCS
11 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
12 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
13 Development and testing of a 2D offshore oil spill modeling tool (OSMT) supported by an effective calibration method Yang Z; Chen Z; Lee K; 36758314
ENCS
14 Numerical simulation of multiphase oil behaviors in ice-covered nearshore water Raznahan M; Li SS; Wang Z; Boufadel M; Geng X; An C; 36095968
ENCS
15 Development and testing of a SOSM approach to examine the natural attenuation of oil spillage on shorelines Yang Z; Chen Z; 35843085
ENCS
16 Exploring the characteristics, performance, and mechanisms of a magnetic-mediated washing fluid for the cleanup of oiled beach sand Yue R; An C; Ye Z; Chen X; Lee K; Zhang K; Wan S; Qu Z; 35780732
ENCS
17 Experimental and modeling studies of the effects of nanoclay on the oil behaviors in a water-sand system Iravani R; An C; Mohammadi M; Lee K; Zhang K; 35233669
ENCS
18 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
19 Development of Sludge-Based Activated Char Sorbent with Enhanced Hydrophobicity for Oil Spill Cleanup Zaker A; Chen Z; Lee K; Hammouda SB; 34842051
ENCS
20 Dispersion modeling of particulate matter from the in-situ burning of spilled oil in the northwest Arctic area of Canada Wang Z; An C; Lee K; Owens E; Boufadel M; Feng Q; 34731942
ENCS
21 A green initiative for oiled sand cleanup using chitosan/rhamnolipid complex dispersion with pH-stimulus response Chen Z; An C; Wang Y; Zhang B; Tian X; Lee K; 34687682
ENCS
22 Hypersaline Pore Water in Gulf of Mexico Beaches Prevented Efficient Biodegradation of Deepwater Horizon Beached Oil Geng X; Khalil CA; Prince RC; Lee K; An C; Boufadel MC; 34617733
ENCS
23 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
24 Investigation into the impact of aged microplastics on oil behavior in shoreline environments Feng Q; An C; Chen Z; Yin J; Zhang B; Lee K; Wang Z; 34332489
ENCS
25 Multiphase CFD simulation of the nearshore spilled oil behaviors Raznahan M; An C; Li SS; Geng X; Boufadel M; 34284211
ENCS
26 Assessing the coastal sensitivity to oil spills from the perspective of ecosystem services: A case study for Canada's pacific coast Feng Q; An C; Chen Z; Owens E; Niu H; Wang Z; 34271360
ENCS
27 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
28 Exploring the use of cellulose nanocrystal as surface-washing agent for oiled shoreline cleanup. Chen Z, An C, Yin J, Owens E, Lee K, Zhang K, Tian X 32693337
ENCS

 

Title:Hypersaline Pore Water in Gulf of Mexico Beaches Prevented Efficient Biodegradation of Deepwater Horizon Beached Oil
Authors:Geng XKhalil CAPrince RCLee KAn CBoufadel MC
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34617733/
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.1c02760
Publication:Environmental science & technology
Keywords:Deepwater Horizon oil spillGulf beachesbeach hydrodynamicscapillary potentialevaporationhypersaline conditionoil biodegradation
PMID:34617733 Category: Date Added:2021-10-07
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, University Heights, Newark, New Jersey 07102, United States.
2 Stonybrook Apiary, Pittstown, New Jersey, 08867, United States.
3 Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia B2Y 4A2, Canada.
4 Department of Building, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec H3G 2W1, Canada.

Description:

The 2010 Deepwater Horizon (DWH) blowout released 3.19 million barrels (435 000 tons) of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico. Driven by currents and wind, an estimated 22 000 tons of spilled oil were deposited onto the northeastern Gulf shorelines, adversely impacting the ecosystems and economies of the Gulf coast regions. In this work we present field work conducted at the Gulf beaches in three U.S. States during 2010-2011: Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida, to explore endogenous mechanisms that control persistence and biodegradation of the MC252-oil deposited within beach sediments as deep as 50 cm. The work involved over 1500 measurements incorporating oil chemistry, hydrocarbon-degrading microbial populations, nutrient and DO concentrations, and intrinsic beach properties. We found that intrinsic beach capillarity along with groundwater depth provides primary controls on aeration and infiltration of near-surface sediments, thereby modulating moisture and redox conditions within the oil-contaminated zone. In addition, atmosphere-ocean-groundwater interactions created hypersaline sediment environments near the beach surface at all the studied sites. The fact that the oil-contaminated sediments retained near or above 20% moisture content and were also eutrophic and aerobic suggests that the limiting factor for oil biodegradation is the hypersaline environment due to evaporation, a fact not reported in prior studies. These results highlight the importance of beach porewater hydrodynamics in generating unique hypersaline sediment environments that inhibited oil decomposition along the Gulf shorelines following DWH.





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