97 research outputs found
Protocols for Handling, Storing, and Cultivating Oil Sands Tailings Ponds Materials for Microbial and Molecular Biological Study
Synthesis of Anaerobic Degradation Biomarkers Alkyl-, Aryl- and Cycloalkylsuccinic Acids and Their Mass Spectral Characteristics
Microbial mineralization of diisopropanolamine
Diisopropanolamine (DIPA) is a "sweetening agent" used to remove hydrogen sulfide from sour natural gas, and it is a contaminant at some sour gas treatment facilities in western Canada. To investigate the biodegradation of this alkanolamine,14C-DIPA was used in anaerobic and aerobic mineralization studies. Between 3 and 78% of the radioactivity from this compound was released as14CO2in sediment-enrichment cultures incubated under nitrate-reducing conditions. Similarly, 12-78% of the label was converted to14CO2in sediment-enrichment cultures incubated under Mn(IV)-reducing conditions. These activities were observed at 8°C, a typical groundwater temperature in western Canada, and at 28°C. In contrast, DIPA-degrading activity was difficult to sustain under Fe(III)-reducing conditions, and <25% of the radioactive label from14C-DIPA was liberated as14CO2. Two mixed cultures and two isolates (both irregular, non-sporeforming, Gram-positive rods) were used to assess aerobic mineralization of14C-DIPA. The aerobic mixed cultures released 73 and 79% of the radioactive label as14CO2, whereas the pure cultures liberated only 39 and 47% as14CO2. Between one-third and one-half of the nitrogen from DIPA was found as ammonium-N in aerobic batch cultures. These results clearly demonstrate that DIPA is mineralized under a variety of incubation conditions.Key words: alkanolamine, biodegradation, diisopropanolamine, mineralization, natural gas.</jats:p
Sulfolane biodegradation potential in aquifer sediments at sour natural gas plant sites
Reactive Reservoir Simulation of Biogenic Shallow Shale Gas Systems Enabled by Experimentally Determined Methane Generation Rates
Intrinsic Bioremediation of Petroleum Hydrocarbons in a Gas Condensate-Contaminated Aquifer
Polarizability and Spin Density Correlate with the Relative Anaerobic Biodegradability of Alkylaromatic Hydrocarbons
Impact of formation water geochemistry and crude oil biodegradation on microbial methanogenesis
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