نتایج جستجو برای: mtbe biodegradation

تعداد نتایج: 8518  

2001
Q. Zhang L. E. Erickson

Methyl-tert-butyl ether (MTBE) is a commonly used gasoline additive. Leaking underground storage tank systems, spills, and pipeline failures are the causes of reported groundwater contamination with MTBE. The impact of vegetation on MTBE plume transport in groundwater and volatilization was experimentally examined. The experimental system consists of six channels, five of which are planted with...

2013
Ashraf Kariminik Javid Amini Kobra Saeidi

Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) was originally introduced as an additive to increase octane number into gasoline in the 1970s. Its use was primarily as an octane enhancer to replace lead in gasoline. Later on, it was also used as an oxygenate, up to 15% v/v, to accomplish a cleaner burning fuel with reduced emissions of carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons. The problem with MTBE is that it has cause...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology ecology 2010
Felipe Bastida Mònica Rosell Alessandro G Franchini Jana Seifert Stefanie Finsterbusch Nico Jehmlich Sven Jechalke Martin von Bergen Hans H Richnow

The structure and function of a microbial community capable of biodegrading methyl-tert-butyl ether (MTBE) was characterized using compound-specific stable isotope analysis (CSIA), clone libraries and stable isotope probing of proteins (Protein-SIP). The enrichment culture (US3-M), which originated from a gasoline-impacted site in the United States, has been enriched on MTBE as the sole carbon ...

2006
M. Mousavian B. Mortazavi

195 INTRODUCTION In an attempt to reduce the environmental consequences associated with incomplete fuel combustion, the US Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, required that oxygenates are added to reformulated gasoline. Since 1979, methyl tert butyl ether (MTBE) has been used in the USA as an octane enhancing replacement for lead, primarily in mid and high grade gasoline. It is the most commonly ...

2002
Marie A. Sedran Amy Pruden Gregory J. Wilson Makram T. Suidan Albert D. Venosa

Methyl tert-butyl ether ~MTBE! contamination in groundwater often coexists with benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene ~BTEX! near the source of the plume. Tertiary butyl alcohol ~TBA! is a prevalent intermediate of MTBE degradation. Therefore, there is a significant potential for interference of MTBE and TBA degradation by the presence of BTEX whether treatment is in situ or ex situ. In th...

Journal: :Toxicology letters 2007
David Kim Melvin E Andersen Joachim D Pleil Leena A Nylander-French James D Prah

Aggregate (multiple pathway) exposures to methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) in air and water occur via dermal, inhalation, and oral routes. Previously, physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models have been used to quantify the kinetic behavior of MTBE and its primary metabolite, tertiary-butyl alcohol (TBA), from inhalation exposures. However, the contribution of dermal and oral exposu...

Journal: :Environmental science & technology 2005
Joseph D Ayotte Denise M Argue Frederick J McGarry

The occurrence of methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) in water from public wells in New Hampshire has increased steadily over the past several years. Using a laboratory reporting level of 0.2 microg/L, 40% of samples from public wells and 21% from private wells in southeast New Hampshire have measurable concentrations of MTBE. The rate of occurrence of MTBE varied significantly for public wells by e...

Journal: :Environmental science & technology 2001
A Pruden M T Suidan A D Venosa G J Wilson

Five aerobic enrichments efficient at degrading methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) under different substrate conditions were developed in well-mixed reactors containing a polyethlene porous pot for biomass retention. The five substrate conditions were as follows: MTBE alone; MTBE and diethyl ether (DEE); MTBE and diisopropyl ether (DIPE); MTBE and ethanol (EtOH); and MTBE with benzene, toluene, eth...

Journal: :Chemosphere 2001
P M Franklin C P Koshland D Lucas R F Sawyer

Methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) is a gasoline oxygenate that is widely used throughout the US and Europe as an octane-booster and as a means of reducing automotive carbon monoxide (CO) emissions. The combustion by-products of pure MTBE have been evaluated in previous laboratory studies, but little attention has been paid to the combustion by-products of MTBE as a component of gasoline. MTBE ...

Journal: :Journal of environmental quality 2002
Gunnar W Schade Gabrielle B Dreyfus Allen H Goldstein

Methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) was measured in air samples collected at hourly intervals near Blodgett Forest Research Station on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada, California, in July 1997, October 1998, and June through September 1999. Mixing ratios ranged from below the detection limit (< approximately 0.01 ppbv) to 0.5 ppbv, but were generally less than 0.3 ppbv. At these mixing ra...

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