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Efficient Quantification of Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons and Applications at Two Contaminated Sites
Author(s) -
Xie Guibo,
Barcelona Michael J.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
groundwater monitoring and remediation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1745-6592
pISSN - 1069-3629
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-6592.2001.tb00302.x
Subject(s) - environmental remediation , contamination , total petroleum hydrocarbon , petroleum , chemistry , environmental chemistry , hydrocarbon , fraction (chemistry) , environmental science , chromatography , organic chemistry , ecology , biology
Characterization and remediation of petroleum contamination are complicated issues due to variable product compositions and site conditions. Generic group analytical methods such as total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) methods have played important field screening and regulatory functions for site characterization and cleanup. This study evaluated the application of three TPH methods (a GC/MS method, a spectrometric method EPA 418.1, and a rapid field method PetroFLAG). The results showed that quantification of TPH could be attained efficiently by a combination of rapid field methods (i.e., PetroFLAG) and more sophisticated fraction‐specific and target‐compound methods. TPH distributions suggested different source release information for two sites with different contaminant mixtures and climate conditions. TPH was also found to correlate with reductive redox capacity (RDC), an important parameter for the design of oxidative remediation schemes. The results indicated that good site specific correlations could be established to better estimate costs of the injection of chemical oxidants if necessary. RDC values varied broadly for both background (83 ˜ 569 meq/kg) and contaminated source (523 ˜ 6044 meq/kg) samples collected from actual sites.