SORPTION OF PHENANTHRENE BY NATURAL ORGANIC MATTER FRACTIONS IN SELECTED ROCKS AND SOILS FROM SOUTHWESTERN NIGERIA
Date
2015-02
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Abstract
Natural Organic Matter (NOM) fractions in rocks, sediments and soils are known to have good
sorptive potentials for frequently occurring Hydrophobic Organic Contaminants (HOCs) such as
phenanthrene. Despite widespread occurrence of organic matter-rich rocks, sediments and soils
in Nigeria, there is limited information on the sorptive potentials of their NOM fractions for
HOCs which may be useful in remediation and clean-up design. This study is aimed at
investigating the sorption of phenanthrene by NOM fractions in selected rocks and soils from
southwestern Nigeria.
Coal and mudstone, carbonaceous shale and sandy soils (500 g each) were purposively collected
from Ute, Auchi and Lagos respectively. The rocks and soils (250 g each) were demineralised
with 1M HCl and mixture of 1M HCl/10%HF (1:3) successively. Lipid and bound-lipid were
extracted via solvent extraction and saponification methods respectively. Lignin was extracted
from the soils with dioxane-acid hydrolysis method. Organic carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
contents of demineralised, lipid free, bound-lipid free and lignin free (NOM fractions) were
determined using bulk method. Organic matter type in the rocks and soils were determined from
atomic ratios of the elements. Sorption parameters (nonlinearity and organic carbon normalised
sorption coefficients, KOC) of the bulk samples (control) and NOM fractions were determined
from sorption experiments using phenanthrene concentrations ranging from 10 to 1250 ppb. The
skeletal carbons of NOM fractions were determined using 13C Cross Polarisation Magic Angle
SpinningNuclear Magnetic Resonance.
The ranges of organic carbon and oxygen contents of NOM fractions in the rocks were
respectively: 53.0-70.8% and 11.6-23.1% (demineralised), 54.4-70.2% and 12.8-26.1% (lipid
free), 33.4-51.6% and 28.3-38.6% (bound-lipid free). Those of NOM fractions in the soils were
correspondingly: 27.8-63.1% and 7.0-21.4% (demineralised), 27.2-65.2% and 16.4-22.1% (lipid
free), 9.2- 54.7% and 14.7-29.3% (bound-lipid free), 15.2-65.3% and 11.2-17.4% (lignin free).
The bound-lipid free has the lowest organic carbon and highest oxygen. The H/C and O/C ratios
in the NOM fractions were: 0.6-1.7, 0.6-1.3, 0.7-2.3, 0.5-1.3 and 0.1-0.5, 0.1-0.6, 0.3-1.2, 0.2-0.6
respectively, indicating increasing degree of maturity in NOM fractions with progressive
extraction except in bound-lipid free. Higher O/C ratio in bound-lipid free indicates high
UNIVERSITY OF IBADAN LIBRARY
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polarity. The plot of H/C and O/C ratios indicated that the rocks contained type III kerogen while
the soils contained type II/III kerogen. Phenanthrene sorption isotherms for bulk samples and
NOM fractions were nonlinear (n<1). The nonlinearity increases with degree of maturity. The
KOC range in bulk rocks, soils, demineralised, lipid free, bound-lipid free and lignin free were:
3305-21241, 751-3133, 570-2883, 2663-14084, 651-28751, 10459-63217 mL/g respectively,
indicating higher sorption capacity in rocks than soils, and increasing sorption capacity in NOM
fractions except in bound-lipid free. Single point KOC decreased with increasing concentration of
phenanthrene in bulk samples and NOM fractions. The skeletal carbons in the NOM fractions
showed that aliphatic carbon peak (0-93 ppm) decreased while aromatic carbon peak (93-165
ppm) increased, which further confirmed the degree of maturity.
The sorption of phenanthrene by natural organic matter fractions in the rocks and soils depended
strongly on the degree of maturity and polarity.
Keywords: Natural phenanthrene, Sorption capacity, Natural organic matter, Degree of maturity.
Word count: 497
Description
A Thesis in the Department of Geology Submitted to the Faculty of Science in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY of the UNIVERSITY OF IBADAN
Keywords
Natural phenanthrene, Sorption capacity, Natural organic matter, Degree of maturity