نتایج جستجو برای: mtbe ژئوتکنیک زیست محیطی

تعداد نتایج: 57340  

2002
E. ZANARDINI C. PISONI G. RANALLI M. ZUCCHI C. SORLINI

The massive production of methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE), a primary constituent of reformulated gasoline, combined with its mobility, persistence and toxicity, makes it an important pollutant. It was considered recalcitrant until a few years ago, but recently MTBE biodegradation in aerobic conditions has been demonstrated with both mixed and pure cultures. Mixed cultures are generally the more ...

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...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1994
J P Salanitro L A Diaz M P Williams H L Wisniewski

We have isolated a mixed bacterial culture (BC-1) which is capable of degrading the gasoline oxygenate methyl t-butyl ether (MTBE). BC-1 was developed from seed microorganisms present in a chemical plant biotreater sludge. This enrichment culture has been maintained in continuous culture treating high concentrations of MTBE (120 to 200 mg/liter) as the sole carbon source in a simple feed contai...

Journal: :Environmental Health Perspectives 1995

Journal: :Gut 1989
R Tritapepe C Pozzi P Caspani C Di Padova

Methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) rapidly dissolves cholesterol gall stones in vitro and in vivo. To further characterise tolerability and safety of this aliphatic ether, either MTBE (1 ml/kg body wt daily for two days) or an equal amount of saline was infused into the common bile duct (CBD) of eight cholecystectomised rabbits. Transient vomiting, dyspnoea and somnolence developed during MTBE ...

Journal: :Environmental science & technology 2016
Tong Liu Hyeri Ahn Weimin Sun Lora R McGuinness Lee J Kerkhof Max M Häggblom

The widespread use of methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) has caused major contamination of groundwater sources and is a concern due to its taste and odor problems, as well as its toxicity. MTBE can be degraded anaerobically which makes bioremediation of contaminated aquifers a potential solution. Nevertheless, the organisms and mechanisms that are responsible for anaerobic MTBE degradation are stil...

1999
Douglas Mackay Ryan Wilson Graham Durrant Kate Scow Amanda Smith Murray Einarson Bill Fowler

We have been studying an MTBE plume at Vandenberg Air Force Base, CA. Microcosm studies with site sediments, conducted at the University of California at Davis and the University of Waterloo, suggest that native aerobic MTBE-degrading bacteria are present in the site sediments and can be stimulated to degrade MTBE solely by adding oxygen. In two separate field tests, dissolved oxygen has been r...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید