Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Thermally and Chemically Disturbed Soil in Northwestern North Dakota

Thermal desorption (TD) remediates hydrocarbon-contaminated soil by heating the soil (200 to 500 °C) to volatilize the hydrocarbons, effectively removing the contaminant from the soil. If the soil is then used for agricultural production, reclamation success can be determined by quantifying aspects...

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Main Author: Ritter, Samantha Susan
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2018
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28416
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spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-284162021-09-28T17:11:02Z Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Thermally and Chemically Disturbed Soil in Northwestern North Dakota Ritter, Samantha Susan Thermal desorption (TD) remediates hydrocarbon-contaminated soil by heating the soil (200 to 500 °C) to volatilize the hydrocarbons, effectively removing the contaminant from the soil. If the soil is then used for agricultural production, reclamation success can be determined by quantifying aspects of soil health. Cation exchange capacity (CEC), cation selectivity and Gibbs free energy (ΔGex) of TD-treated and untreated soil were compared. Although CEC and ΔGex differed, cation selectivities were not altered suggesting that alternative fertility management to retain previous soil productivity may not be needed. From field plots, N-transforming genes were lowered in contaminated and TD-treated soils as compared to non-contaminated soil, but the addition of surface soil (1:1 blends) increased N-cycling genes to levels reported in the literature. Thermal desorption may not alter soil chemical as much as biological metrics, but blending treated or contaminated soils with native surface soils can enhance soil function and, ultimately, productivity. Tesoro Logistics Operations, LLC 2018-07-06T19:10:05Z 2018-07-06T19:10:05Z 2017 text/thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28416 NDSU policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf application/pdf North Dakota State University
collection NDLTD
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sources NDLTD
description Thermal desorption (TD) remediates hydrocarbon-contaminated soil by heating the soil (200 to 500 °C) to volatilize the hydrocarbons, effectively removing the contaminant from the soil. If the soil is then used for agricultural production, reclamation success can be determined by quantifying aspects of soil health. Cation exchange capacity (CEC), cation selectivity and Gibbs free energy (ΔGex) of TD-treated and untreated soil were compared. Although CEC and ΔGex differed, cation selectivities were not altered suggesting that alternative fertility management to retain previous soil productivity may not be needed. From field plots, N-transforming genes were lowered in contaminated and TD-treated soils as compared to non-contaminated soil, but the addition of surface soil (1:1 blends) increased N-cycling genes to levels reported in the literature. Thermal desorption may not alter soil chemical as much as biological metrics, but blending treated or contaminated soils with native surface soils can enhance soil function and, ultimately, productivity. === Tesoro Logistics Operations, LLC
author Ritter, Samantha Susan
spellingShingle Ritter, Samantha Susan
Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Thermally and Chemically Disturbed Soil in Northwestern North Dakota
author_facet Ritter, Samantha Susan
author_sort Ritter, Samantha Susan
title Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Thermally and Chemically Disturbed Soil in Northwestern North Dakota
title_short Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Thermally and Chemically Disturbed Soil in Northwestern North Dakota
title_full Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Thermally and Chemically Disturbed Soil in Northwestern North Dakota
title_fullStr Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Thermally and Chemically Disturbed Soil in Northwestern North Dakota
title_full_unstemmed Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Thermally and Chemically Disturbed Soil in Northwestern North Dakota
title_sort chemical and biological characteristics of thermally and chemically disturbed soil in northwestern north dakota
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28416
work_keys_str_mv AT rittersamanthasusan chemicalandbiologicalcharacteristicsofthermallyandchemicallydisturbedsoilinnorthwesternnorthdakota
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