Decontamination of Petroleum-Contaminated Soils Using the Electrochemical Technique: Remediation Degree and Energy Consumption

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Abstract

Currently, there are different remediation technologies for contaminated soils, but the selection of the best technology must be not only the treatment efficiency but also the energy consumption (costs) during its application. This paper is focused on assessing energy consumption related to the electrochemical treatment of polluted soil with petroleum hydrocarbons. In the framework of a research project, two types of experiments were conducted using soil that was artificially contaminated with diesel fuel at the same level of contamination. The experimental conditions considered for each experiment were: different amounts of contaminated soils (6 kg and 18 kg, respectively), the same current intensity level (0.25A and 0.5A), three different contamination degrees (1%, 2.5% and 5%) and the same time for application of the electrochemical treatment. The remediation degree concerning the removal of petroleum hydrocarbons from soil increased over time by approximately 20% over 7 days. With regard to energy consumption, the results revealed that with an increase in the quantity of treated soil of approximately three times, the specific energy consumption decreased from 2.94 kWh/kg treated soil to 1.64 kWh/kg treated soil.

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Streche, C., Cocârţǎ, D. M., Istrate, I. A., & Badea, A. A. (2018). Decontamination of Petroleum-Contaminated Soils Using the Electrochemical Technique: Remediation Degree and Energy Consumption. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-21606-4

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