Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials

A Master of Science thesis in Chemical Engineering by Abdul Sami Gulistan entitled, "Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials," submitted in June 2014. Thesis advisor is Dr. Taleb Ibrahim and thesis co-advisor is Dr. Hussain Ahmed. Available are both soft and hard copies of...

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Main Author: Gulistan, Abdul Sami
Other Authors: Ibrahim, Taleb, Ahmed, Hussain
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11073/7663
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spelling ftamerunishariah:oai:repository.aus.edu:11073/7663 2024-10-06T13:52:34+00:00 Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials Gulistan, Abdul Sami Ibrahim, Taleb Ahmed, Hussain 2014-06 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11073/7663 en_US eng Master of Science in Chemical Engineering (MSChE) 35.232-2014.28 http://hdl.handle.net/11073/7663 produced water pomegranate peel bio-sorbent equilibrium isotherms kinetic model organic and inorganic pollutants Water Purification Adsorption Gas industry By-products Agricultural wastes Recycling Thesis 2014 ftamerunishariah 2024-09-13T08:54:23Z A Master of Science thesis in Chemical Engineering by Abdul Sami Gulistan entitled, "Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials," submitted in June 2014. Thesis advisor is Dr. Taleb Ibrahim and thesis co-advisor is Dr. Hussain Ahmed. Available are both soft and hard copies of the thesis. The oil and gas industry has had to deal with a massive amount of waste water as a bi-product of the exploration of oil and gas. This waste water referred to as produced water (PW) and the amount of PW increases with the well operation time and may increase to approximately 80%. The discharge of PW may lead to severe pollution of surface, soil and under-ground water. Oil-field-produced water contains organic and inorganic compounds. One commonly used technique to remove oil from PW is adsorption. In this work, pomegranate peel powder (PPP) is used as a low cost adsorbent for the removal of crude oil from simulated produced water (SPW) and real PW from oil and gas wells. Pomegranate peels (agricultural waste) were dried, crushed and washed with double distilled water and dried again. Characterized for surface morphology, elemental composition, functional groups and surface area using analytical equipment like SEM, EDS, FTIR, and BET isotherm respectively. EDS spectroscopy showed that the major elemental constituent in the bio-sorbent was carbon (up to 78%). However, oxygen, calcium, silicon and potassium were also observed in small quantities. Oil was removed from laboratory-produced water in a batch process at standard atmospheric conditions. The effect of contact time, adsorbent dosage, pH as well as temperature on the removal efficiency of oil was investigated. The optimum parameters for oil removal were: pH = 9.5, pomegranate = 2.33 g/L, contact time = 40.0 minutes and adsorption temperature = 55.0 C. The results showed that as the adsorbent dosage, pH and salinity of SPW are increased, the removal efficiency increased. The adsorption of crude oil by PPP was found to follow the Langmuir adsorption isotherm ... Thesis sami DSpace at AUS (American University of Sharjah) Langmuir ENVELOPE(-67.150,-67.150,-66.967,-66.967)
institution Open Polar
collection DSpace at AUS (American University of Sharjah)
op_collection_id ftamerunishariah
language English
topic produced water
pomegranate peel
bio-sorbent
equilibrium isotherms
kinetic model
organic and inorganic pollutants
Water
Purification
Adsorption
Gas industry
By-products
Agricultural wastes
Recycling
spellingShingle produced water
pomegranate peel
bio-sorbent
equilibrium isotherms
kinetic model
organic and inorganic pollutants
Water
Purification
Adsorption
Gas industry
By-products
Agricultural wastes
Recycling
Gulistan, Abdul Sami
Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials
topic_facet produced water
pomegranate peel
bio-sorbent
equilibrium isotherms
kinetic model
organic and inorganic pollutants
Water
Purification
Adsorption
Gas industry
By-products
Agricultural wastes
Recycling
description A Master of Science thesis in Chemical Engineering by Abdul Sami Gulistan entitled, "Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials," submitted in June 2014. Thesis advisor is Dr. Taleb Ibrahim and thesis co-advisor is Dr. Hussain Ahmed. Available are both soft and hard copies of the thesis. The oil and gas industry has had to deal with a massive amount of waste water as a bi-product of the exploration of oil and gas. This waste water referred to as produced water (PW) and the amount of PW increases with the well operation time and may increase to approximately 80%. The discharge of PW may lead to severe pollution of surface, soil and under-ground water. Oil-field-produced water contains organic and inorganic compounds. One commonly used technique to remove oil from PW is adsorption. In this work, pomegranate peel powder (PPP) is used as a low cost adsorbent for the removal of crude oil from simulated produced water (SPW) and real PW from oil and gas wells. Pomegranate peels (agricultural waste) were dried, crushed and washed with double distilled water and dried again. Characterized for surface morphology, elemental composition, functional groups and surface area using analytical equipment like SEM, EDS, FTIR, and BET isotherm respectively. EDS spectroscopy showed that the major elemental constituent in the bio-sorbent was carbon (up to 78%). However, oxygen, calcium, silicon and potassium were also observed in small quantities. Oil was removed from laboratory-produced water in a batch process at standard atmospheric conditions. The effect of contact time, adsorbent dosage, pH as well as temperature on the removal efficiency of oil was investigated. The optimum parameters for oil removal were: pH = 9.5, pomegranate = 2.33 g/L, contact time = 40.0 minutes and adsorption temperature = 55.0 C. The results showed that as the adsorbent dosage, pH and salinity of SPW are increased, the removal efficiency increased. The adsorption of crude oil by PPP was found to follow the Langmuir adsorption isotherm ...
author2 Ibrahim, Taleb
Ahmed, Hussain
format Thesis
author Gulistan, Abdul Sami
author_facet Gulistan, Abdul Sami
author_sort Gulistan, Abdul Sami
title Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials
title_short Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials
title_full Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials
title_fullStr Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials
title_full_unstemmed Oil Removal From Produced Water Using Natural Materials
title_sort oil removal from produced water using natural materials
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11073/7663
long_lat ENVELOPE(-67.150,-67.150,-66.967,-66.967)
geographic Langmuir
geographic_facet Langmuir
genre sami
genre_facet sami
op_relation Master of Science in Chemical Engineering (MSChE)
35.232-2014.28
http://hdl.handle.net/11073/7663
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