Tracking the Fate of Petroleum Hydrocarbons in Groundwater
Silvia A. Mancini,
This research will
develop stable carbon and hydrogen isotope analysis and quantitative Polymerase
Chain Reaction (qPCR) analysis as techniques to
quantify the extent to which in-situ biodegradation processes are contributing
to the attenuation of petroleum hydrocarbons in contaminated groundwater. Benzene
and toluene will be the focus of this project - the most soluble and toxic
components of petroleum derivatives.
It is known that
processes, such as sorption and volatilization, do not significantly alter the
isotopic signature of benzene and toluene, whereas biodegradation is known to
cause isotopic enrichment in the remaining contaminant pool. This makes it
possible to use isotope analysis to distinguish between biodegradation and non-degradative processes. qPCR analysis is increasingly being used as a
“biomarker” method of enumerating bacterial genes, cells and their potential
functions in nature. Demonstration of both of these techniques in the field has
remained limited. The combined use of isotope analysis and qPCR
analysis is particularly valuable given the challenge of verifying and quantifying
biodegradation at sites where biodegradation rates can be slow and traditional
geochemical indicators may not be significantly affected.
This project will involve
measuring the isotopic behavior of benzene and toluene in anaerobic cultures
characterized for gene sequences from different organisms involved in the
biodegradation process. The predictability
of bioremediation performance will be tested in soil filled columns inoculated
with the benzene and toluene cultures. By
modeling the isotope data and relating the qPCR data
to the consumption of contaminant, it will be determined whether these methods
can quantitatively assess biodegradation.