Factors affecting pluronic-coated iron oxide nanoparticle binding to petroleum hydrocarbon-impacted sediments.
2020
Abstract Effective targeted delivery of nanoparticle agents may enhance the remediation of soils and site characterization efforts. Nanoparticles coated with Pluronic, an amphiphilic block co-polymer, demonstrate targeted binding behaviour toward light non-aqueous phase liquids such as heavy crude oil. Various factors including coating concentration, oil concentration, oil type, temperature, and pH were assessed to determine their effect on nanoparticle binding to heavy crude oil-impacted sandy aquifer material. Nanoparticle binding was increased by decreasing the coating concentration, increasing oil concentration, using heavier oil types, and increasing temperature, while pH over the range of 5–9 was found to have no effect. Nanoparticle transport and binding in columns packed with clean and oily porous media demonstrated the ability for efficient nanoparticle targeted binding. For the conditions explored, the attachment rate coefficient in columns packed with clean sand was 2.10 ± 0.66 × 10−4 s−1; however, for columns packed with oil-impacted sand a minimum attachment rate coefficient of 8.86 ± 0.43 × 10−4 s−1 was estimated. The higher attachment rate for the oil-impacted sand system indicates that nanoparticles may preferentially accumulate to oil-impacted zones present at heterogeneous impacted sites. Simulations were used to demonstrate this hypothesis using the set of parameters generated in this effort. This work contributes to our understanding of the application conditions that are required for efficient targeted binding of nanoparticles to crude-oil impacted porous media.
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