Treatment of produced water from Niger Delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbents

Produced water (PW) exploited from the reservoir alongside oil often contains heavy metals and other impurities that are harmful to man and the environment. Most of the PW treatment technologies that have been in use for years have been reported to be ineffective in reducing some of the impurities a...

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Main Authors: S.G Udeagbara, S.O Isehunwa, N.U Okereke, I. U Oguamah, A Kerunwa, O. Nwanwe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-01-01
Series:Cogent Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2021.1939927
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spelling doaj-eda07ac7d9a34da492eb8fd32eccb36f2021-08-09T18:41:17ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Engineering2331-19162021-01-018110.1080/23311916.2021.19399271939927Treatment of produced water from Niger Delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbentsS.G Udeagbara0S.O Isehunwa1N.U Okereke2I. U Oguamah3A Kerunwa4O. Nwanwe5Afe Babalola UniversityUniversity of IbadanFederal University of TechnologyFederal University of TechnologyFederal University of TechnologyFederal University of TechnologyProduced water (PW) exploited from the reservoir alongside oil often contains heavy metals and other impurities that are harmful to man and the environment. Most of the PW treatment technologies that have been in use for years have been reported to be ineffective in reducing some of the impurities and metal concentrations to allowable disposal levels. This study evaluated the effectiveness of four local materials combined for treating PW from Niger Delta oil fields. Orange peels (I), banana peels (II), sponge gourd (Luffa cylindrica) (III) and palm kernel fibers (IV) were washed with distilled water, sun-dried (24 hours) and oven-dried at 105 ± 5°C (3 hours, I and II), 150°C (30 minutes, III) and 80°C (3 hours, IV). They were ground into powder, sieved (150 microns, Group A) and (300 mcicrons, Group B), washed with 0.4 mol/L HNO3, filtered and rinsed with distilled water. Samples of PW were obtained from fields R, X, and Y in the Niger Delta and analyzed for heavy metals using an Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometer (AAS). The PW samples were treated with the bio-adsorbents sequentially in the adsorption column for over 7 hours. Langmuir and Freundlich models were used to evaluate the samples and the Data was analyzed based on regression method. The 150 micron size of sample R, lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), and chromium (Cr) were completely (100%) adsorbed from the PW after 8 hours of treatment while other metals (Ni, Fe, Mg, Zn, Mn, Ca, Ar, B, Sn, Ba) were found to be 86.11%, 90.76%, 39.25%, 94.40%, 43.55%, 99.26%, 54.62%, 44.53%, 84.52%, and 47.37%, respectively. while the reduction in 300 micron size were 23.48% for Pb, 80.20% for Ni, 71.42% for Cd, 19.73%, for Cu. 43.65% for Fe, 34.79% for Mg, 12.67% for Cr, 88.8% for Zn, 35.48% for Mn, 98.95% for Ca, 23.01% for Ar, 44.52% for B, 14.83% for Sn and 23.68% for Ba, respectively. The finer adsorbent with large surface area was more effective. Similar results were obtained for PW samples from the other fields. Sequential mixture of the bio-adsorbents selected proved valuable in the treatment of contaminants in PW from Niger Delta oil fields.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2021.1939927produced watertoxic metalsadsorption columnadsorption isothermsbio-adsorbents
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S.G Udeagbara
S.O Isehunwa
N.U Okereke
I. U Oguamah
A Kerunwa
O. Nwanwe
spellingShingle S.G Udeagbara
S.O Isehunwa
N.U Okereke
I. U Oguamah
A Kerunwa
O. Nwanwe
Treatment of produced water from Niger Delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbents
Cogent Engineering
produced water
toxic metals
adsorption column
adsorption isotherms
bio-adsorbents
author_facet S.G Udeagbara
S.O Isehunwa
N.U Okereke
I. U Oguamah
A Kerunwa
O. Nwanwe
author_sort S.G Udeagbara
title Treatment of produced water from Niger Delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbents
title_short Treatment of produced water from Niger Delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbents
title_full Treatment of produced water from Niger Delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbents
title_fullStr Treatment of produced water from Niger Delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbents
title_full_unstemmed Treatment of produced water from Niger Delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbents
title_sort treatment of produced water from niger delta oil fields using sequential mixture of bio-adsorbents
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Engineering
issn 2331-1916
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Produced water (PW) exploited from the reservoir alongside oil often contains heavy metals and other impurities that are harmful to man and the environment. Most of the PW treatment technologies that have been in use for years have been reported to be ineffective in reducing some of the impurities and metal concentrations to allowable disposal levels. This study evaluated the effectiveness of four local materials combined for treating PW from Niger Delta oil fields. Orange peels (I), banana peels (II), sponge gourd (Luffa cylindrica) (III) and palm kernel fibers (IV) were washed with distilled water, sun-dried (24 hours) and oven-dried at 105 ± 5°C (3 hours, I and II), 150°C (30 minutes, III) and 80°C (3 hours, IV). They were ground into powder, sieved (150 microns, Group A) and (300 mcicrons, Group B), washed with 0.4 mol/L HNO3, filtered and rinsed with distilled water. Samples of PW were obtained from fields R, X, and Y in the Niger Delta and analyzed for heavy metals using an Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometer (AAS). The PW samples were treated with the bio-adsorbents sequentially in the adsorption column for over 7 hours. Langmuir and Freundlich models were used to evaluate the samples and the Data was analyzed based on regression method. The 150 micron size of sample R, lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), and chromium (Cr) were completely (100%) adsorbed from the PW after 8 hours of treatment while other metals (Ni, Fe, Mg, Zn, Mn, Ca, Ar, B, Sn, Ba) were found to be 86.11%, 90.76%, 39.25%, 94.40%, 43.55%, 99.26%, 54.62%, 44.53%, 84.52%, and 47.37%, respectively. while the reduction in 300 micron size were 23.48% for Pb, 80.20% for Ni, 71.42% for Cd, 19.73%, for Cu. 43.65% for Fe, 34.79% for Mg, 12.67% for Cr, 88.8% for Zn, 35.48% for Mn, 98.95% for Ca, 23.01% for Ar, 44.52% for B, 14.83% for Sn and 23.68% for Ba, respectively. The finer adsorbent with large surface area was more effective. Similar results were obtained for PW samples from the other fields. Sequential mixture of the bio-adsorbents selected proved valuable in the treatment of contaminants in PW from Niger Delta oil fields.
topic produced water
toxic metals
adsorption column
adsorption isotherms
bio-adsorbents
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2021.1939927
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