Transport and Retention of Concentrated Oil-in-Water Emulsions in

Mar 9, 2018 - Oil-in-water emulsions are routinely used in subsurface remediation. In these applications, high oil loadings present a challenge to rem...
1 downloads 6 Views 1MB Size
Subscriber access provided by - Access paid by the | UCSB Libraries

Remediation and Control Technologies

Transport and Retention of Concentrated Oil-in-Water Emulsions in Porous Media Katherine A. Muller, Somayeh G Esfahani, Steven C. Chapra, and C. Andrew Ramsburg Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b06012 • Publication Date (Web): 09 Mar 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 9, 2018

Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.

is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.

Page 1 of 27

Environmental Science & Technology

1 2 3

Transport and Retention of Concentrated Oil-in-Water Emulsions in Porous Media

4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16

Katherine A. Mullera,b*, Somayeh G. Esfahania,c, Steven C. Chapraa, C. Andrew Ramsburga a

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tufts University, 200 College Avenue, Room 113, Anderson Hall, Medford, Massachusetts, USA b

Current affiliation: Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee c

Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering, University of Texas at Austin, Texas, USA *

corresponding author

17 18 19 20 21 22 23

For Submission To:

24

Environmental Science and Technology

25

March 2018

26 27

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Environmental Science & Technology

28

TOC/ABSTRACT ART

29

30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 2 of 27

Page 3 of 27

49 50

Environmental Science & Technology

ABSTRACT Oil-in-water emulsions are routinely used in subsurface remediation with most applications

51

utilizing highly concentrated emulsions (i.e., ≥ 20% wt.). These high oil loadings present a

52

challenge to remedial design as mechanistic insights into transport and retention of concentrated

53

emulsions is limited. Column experiments were designed to examine emulsion transport and

54

retention over a range of input concentrations (1.3 - 23% wt.). Droplet breakthrough and

55

retention data from low concentration experiments was successfully described by existing

56

particle transport models. These models, however, failed to capture droplet transport in more

57

concentrated systems. At high oil fraction, breakthrough curves exhibited an early fall at the end

58

of the emulsion pulse and extending tailing. Irrespective of input concentration, all retention

59

profiles displayed hyper-exponential behavior. Here, we extended existing model formulations to

60

include the additional mixing processes occurring when at high oil concentrations - with focus on

61

the influence of deposited mass and viscous instabilities. The resulting model was parameterized

62

with low concentration data and can successfully predict concentrated emulsion transport and

63

retention. The role of retained mass and viscous instabilities on mixing conditions can also be

64

applied more broadly to systems with temporal or spatially variant water saturation or when

65

viscosity contrasts exist between fluids.

66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Environmental Science & Technology

75

INTRODUCTION

76

Oil-in-water emulsions have been used in environmental remediation for a variety of

77

applications including: enhanced contaminant recovery (e.g.,1-2); contaminant stabilization (e.g.,

78

3

79

ingredients to the subsurface (e.g.,10-12). Utilization of emulsions for in situ remediation requires

80

a balance between retention of remedial amendments and ease of introducing and distributing the

81

amendment in the subsurface. Concentrated emulsions (e.g., in excess of 10% wt. dispersed

82

phase content) or neat edible oils can be used to reach remediation outcomes 4, 6, 13. However,

83

emulsion transport and retention, especially at high concentration, remains largely empirical.

84

Remediation design can be improved through a greater emphasis on the processes controlling

85

emulsion mobility and retention in porous media.

) fermentable substrate delivery (e.g.,4-6); mobility control (e.g.,7-9); and to deliver active

86

A critical aspect of emulsion transport modeling is the need to incorporate changes to the

87

droplet retention characteristics over the course of a retention event (e.g., through a reduction of

88

the filter coefficient 14, introduction of surface capacity 15-16, or conceptualization of film flow

89

component 17). The influence of input concentration, emulsion viscosity, and droplet retention on

90

mixing and tailing is largely absent in emulsion transport models, despite observations of

91

emulsion tailing (e.g.,15, 18-19). Increased colloid mobility with increasing input concentration has

92

been demonstrated within the colloid literature, yet the influence of input concentration in the

93

emulsion literature is limited. Neglecting input concentration is particularly troubling, given that

94

droplet concentration (or oil fraction) can cause emulsion viscosities to vary over orders of

95

magnitude. For example, Soo & Radke 14 exclude emulsions greater than 1% from their

96

modeling effort, and Coulibaly et al.15 suggest degraded model performance when emulsion

97

density and viscosity deviate from that of water.

98

Viscosity contrasts between invading and resident fluids, regardless of miscibility, can

99

result in flow instabilities. Specifically, conditions are favorable for viscous fingering when a

100

less viscous fluid displaces a more viscous fluid 20. This is a relevant, but often overlooked,

101

aspect of amendment delivery, as groundwater re-enters a treatment zone following a period of

102

amendment injection (amendments have viscosities greater than that of water). The resulting

103

instability may or may not be negligible. But, the influence of viscous fingering on transport

104

during miscible displacements such as those experienced during concentrated emulsion delivery, 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 4 of 27

Page 5 of 27

Environmental Science & Technology

105

needs to be accounted for using averaged models or direct numerical simulations of the physical

106

fingering process (e.g., 20-21). Viscous fingering degrades the applicability of standard

107

mechanical dispersion assumptions 22; however, when the dispersed phase is conceptualized as a

108

solute (as in colloid filtration theory), viscous instabilities can manifest as dispersive mixing 22.

109

The overall objective of this work was to explore the role of input droplet concentration

110

on emulsion transport and retention. Specifically, we aimed to develop a modeling approach that

111

captures the influence of droplet concentration on droplet transport. This was accomplished by:

112

(i) understanding the roles of mass retention and viscosity contrasts on emulsion transport in

113

sandy porous media, and (ii) ascertaining if incorporating these effects enables prediction of high

114

concentration (i.e., 20-25% wt.) emulsion transport using colloid-filtration models parameterized

115

at low concentration (i.e., 1.3-2.3% wt.).

116

MATERIALS AND METHODS

117

Materials. Soybean oil (SBO, MP Biomedicals, Laboratory grade), Gum Arabic (GA,

118

>99% purity), sodium bromide (NaBr, 99.9% purity, ACS grade), and sodium chloride (NaCl,

119

99.5% purity, ACS grade) were purchased from Fisher Scientific. High purity water, denoted

120

MilliQ water, (resistivity > 18.2 mΩ-cm and total organic carbon E ⋅ H

(4)

−1

243

All terms in Equation 4 other than L, the column length [L], have been previously defined. The

244

functional form of Equation 4 is similar to that used by Flowers and Hunt 22 to describe the

245

mixing effects of fingering in miscible displacements of brines.

246

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

247

Emulsion Properties. The GA-stabilized oil-in-water emulsions used herein had

248

dispersed phase contents between 1 and 25% wt. Emulsion charactersitics include a d50 between

249

1.0 and 1.5 µm, zeta potentials from -30 and -35 mV, densities between 0.992 and 0.998 g/mL,

250

and viscosities between 1 and 10 mPa·s. Emulsion density varied less than 0.6% across

251

approximately an order of magnitude of dispersed phase content. This suggests that the phase

252

density of these emulsions can be assumed to be independent of the amount of deposition

253

occuring during transport or the influent emulsion content (i.e., temporal and spatial derivitatives

254

of phase density can be assumed to be zero). In constrast, emulsion viscosity varies by an order

255

of magnitude over the same range of dispersed phase content, suggesting viscous instabilities

256

may influence emulsion transport (i.e., mobility ratio greater than 1). 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 12 of 27

Page 13 of 27

257

Environmental Science & Technology

Emulsion Retention. When considering retention on FF sand (i.e., experiments 1-4), the

258

influence of emulsion concentration is clear. Dilute emulsions (1.3 & 2.3% dispersed phase)

259

were found to retain between 2 and 8 mg DP·g-sand-1. In contrast, retention of the concentrated

260

emulsion (23% dispersed phase content) was found to be between 20 and 50 mg DP·g-sand-1. In

261

all cases the dispersed phase retention was characterized by a hyper-exponential pattern (Figure

262

1, Table S2).

13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Environmental Science & Technology

263 264

Figure 1. Experimental dispersed phase breakthrough curves (left) and retention profiles (right)

265

for experiments 1A and 1B (a,b); experiments 2A & 2B (c,d); and experiments 3A, 3B, and 4

14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 14 of 27

Page 15 of 27

Environmental Science & Technology

266

(e,f). Note the change in y-axis of (b) & (d) compared to (f). The influence of mass deposition on

267

water saturation is shown in the Supporting Information (Figure S2).

268 269

Dispersivity. Dispersion was found to increase by an order-of-magnitude between the

270

pre- and post-emulsion tracer tests and could not be accounted for through velocity alone (i.e.,

271

changes in velocity relating to the decreased water saturation in the porous medium). Recall that

272

the distribution of retained emulsion droplets was spatially non-uniform (i.e., hyper-exponential

273

deposition). Rather than masking this non-uniformity in a single value of dispersivity for the

274

entire column, we explored both linear and nonlinear formulations linking mechanical mixing to

275

emulsion retention.

15 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Environmental Science & Technology

276 277

Figure 2. Non-reactive tracer test results before (left) and after (right) emulsion injection. (a)

278

Pre-injection and (b) Post-injection tracer tests with corresponding constant, linear, and

279

nonlinear models for experiment 1 (c) Pre-injection and (d) Post-injection tracer tests for

280

experiment 3 (e) Pre-injection and (f) Post-injection tracer tests for experiment 4.

281 282

Fits of each Dm model to experiments 1 and 3 suggest that both the linear (AICc = -155.1) and nonlinear (AICc = -156.5) models provide very similar value in describing the non-reactive 16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 16 of 27

Page 17 of 27

Environmental Science & Technology

283

tracer transport (Figure 2). Moreover, model parameters fit to data from experiments 1 and 3

284

(M1=19.6; M2=37.6, N=1.26) provide good predictions for the post-emulsion tracer data obtained

285

from experiment 4 (which was conducted at high input concentration and independent of those

286

used in the fitting). Based on the slightly lower AICc, the nonlinear expression was selected for

287

use throughout this work (Figure 2f).

288

Emulsion Transport. Results from experiment 1 (1.3 % wt.) show a rise across the ‘top’

289

of the breakthrough curves (BTCs) and hyper-exponential retention profiles (RPs) (Figure 1 a-b).

290

While the RPs in experiment 2 (2.3% wt.) are also hyper-exponential, the rise in the BTCs

291

appears more muted and rounded (Figure 1 c-d). Results from experiment 3 (23% wt.) also show

292

hyper-exponential retention, but the influence of retention on the BTC appears limited. More

293

noticeable in the BTC are the approach of the effluent concentration to that of the influent, an

294

early fall of the emulsion pulse (i.e., early breakthrough of the post-emulsion flush), and

295

pronounced emulsion tailing. Remobilization of the retained mass was found to be insignificant

296

even after periods of extended flushing (data not shown).

297

The fraction of mass retained in experiments 1, 2 and 3 was approximately 0.33, 0.25,

298

and 0.17, respectively. While these fractions and the BTCs appear to suggest an increasingly

299

more limited role of retention with increasing influent concentration, there is substantial mass

300

retained in all cases, and retention is greater when higher dispersed phase content is input (Figure

301

1). At lower influent concentrations (experiments 1 and 2), maximum retention is