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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 869: 161657, 2023 Apr 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36669665

RESUMO

The first objective of this study is to present unique field data on a three-year pilot test during which air containing 8 mol% O2(g) was injected as a cushion gas into a natural gas reservoir, a carbonate-cemented sandstone aquifer located in the Paris Basin (France). 10-year system survey showed that: the oxygen was fully depleted several months after injection completion, meanwhile CO2(g) was detected around 2-6 mol%; the pH decreased from 8 to 6, while reducing conditions shifted to mildly oxidizing ones with increasing concentration of sulfates in equilibrium with gypsum. 3 years after injection completion, the pH gradually returned to its near initial state and sulfates were reduced by 2 to 3 times. The second objective is to develop a multiphase reactive transport model based on the field data. Simulations were constructed using the HYTEC reactive transport code, progressing from 0D-batch to 2D-reservoir configurations. The model reproduced the gas-water-rock reactive sequence: 1/ full depletion of the injected O2(g) due to pyrite oxidation, 2/ leading to acidity production and dissolved sulfates, 3/ acidity buffering by calcite dissolution, 4/ followed by gypsum precipitation and CO2(g) exsolution. The model demonstrated that pyrite kinetics was the most significant factor governing not only the amount of O2(g), CO2(g) and dissolved minerals, but also the spatial extent of these chemical reactions and, hence, the gas spread inside the reservoir. The formulated advective Damköhler number for oxygen consumption indicated advection- and reaction-dominant regimes explaining the gas composition and extension. The developed field-based model could be used as a workflow for other gas storage facilities, e.g. biomethane, compressed air, and CO2. For underground biomethane storage, the O2(g) contents recommended in Europe, i.e. the EASEE-gas specification 2005-001-02, should have a low impact on gas composition and reservoir geochemistry when the reservoir contains efficient pH-buffers such as calcite.

2.
Sci Total Environ ; 806(Pt 3): 150690, 2022 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34600980

RESUMO

The last few years have seen the proliferation of anaerobic digestion plants to produce biomethane. Oxygen (O2) traces added to biogas during the desulfurization process are co-injected in the gas network and can be stored in Underground Gas Storage (UGS). However, there are no data available for the undesirable effects of O2 on these anoxic environments, especially on deep aquifers. In addition to mineral alteration, O2 can have an impact on the anaerobic autochthonous microbial life. In our study, the storage conditions of an UGS aquifer were reproduced in a high-pressure reactor and bio-geo-chemical interactions between the aqueous, gas and solid phases were studied. Sulfate was depleted from the liquid phase for three consecutive times during the first 130 days of incubation reproducing the storage conditions (36 °C, 60 bar, methane with 1% CO2). Sulfate-reducers, such as Desulfovibrionaceae, were identified from the high-pressure system. Simulations with PHREEQC were used to determine the thermodynamic equilibrium to confirm any gas consumption. CO2 quantities decreased in the gas phase, suggesting its use as carbon source by microbial life. Benzene and toluene, hydrocarbons found in traces and known to be biodegradable in storages, were monitored and a decrease of toluene was revealed and associated to the Peptococcaceae family. Afterwards, O2 was added as 1% of the gas phase, corresponding to the maximum quantity found in biomethane after desulfurization process. Re-oxidation of sulfide to sulfate was observed along with the end of sulfate reducing activity and toluene biodegradation and the disappearance of most of the community. H2 surprisingly appeared and accumulated as soon as hydrogenotrophic sulfate-reducers decreased. H2 would be produced via the necromass fermentation accomplished by microorganisms able to resist the oxic conditions of 4.42·10-4 mol.Kgw-1 of O2. The solid phase composed essentially of quartz, presented no remarkable changes.


Assuntos
Água Subterrânea , Oxigênio , Geologia , Metano , Sulfatos
3.
Front Microbiol ; 13: 1012400, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36687568

RESUMO

To be effective, microbiological studies of deep aquifers must be free from surface microbial contaminants and from infrastructures allowing access to formation water (wellheads, well completions). Many microbiological studies are based on water samples obtained after rinsing a well without guaranteeing the absence of contaminants from the biofilm development in the pipes. The protocol described in this paper presents the adaptation, preparation, sterilization and deployment of a commercial downhole sampler (PDSshort, Leutert, Germany) for the microbiological studying of deep aquifers. The ATEX sampler (i.e., explosive atmospheres) can be deployed for geological gas storage (methane, hydrogen). To validate our procedure and confirm the need to use such a device, cell counting and bacterial taxonomic diversity based on high-throughput sequencing for different water samples taken at the wellhead or at depth using the downhole sampler were compared and discussed. The results show that even after extensive rinsing (7 bore volumes), the water collected at the wellhead was not free of microbial contaminants, as shown by beta-diversity analysis. The downhole sampler procedure was the only way to ensure the purity of the formation water samples from the microbiological point of view. In addition, the downhole sampler allowed the formation water and the autochthonous microbial community to be maintained at in situ pressure for laboratory analysis. The prevention of the contamination of the sample and the preservation of its representativeness are key to guaranteeing the best interpretations and understanding of the functioning of the deep biosphere.

4.
Front Microbiol ; 12: 688929, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34721313

RESUMO

Deep aquifers (up to 2km deep) contain massive volumes of water harboring large and diverse microbial communities at high pressure. Aquifers are home to microbial ecosystems that participate in physicochemical balances. These microorganisms can positively or negatively interfere with subsurface (i) energy storage (CH4 and H2), (ii) CO2 sequestration; and (iii) resource (water, rare metals) exploitation. The aquifer studied here (720m deep, 37°C, 88bar) is naturally oligotrophic, with a total organic carbon content of <1mg.L-1 and a phosphate content of 0.02mg.L-1. The influence of natural gas storage locally generates different pressures and formation water displacements, but it also releases organic molecules such as monoaromatic hydrocarbons at the gas/water interface. The hydrocarbon biodegradation ability of the indigenous microbial community was evaluated in this work. The in situ microbial community was dominated by sulfate-reducing (e.g., Sva0485 lineage, Thermodesulfovibriona, Desulfotomaculum, Desulfomonile, and Desulfovibrio), fermentative (e.g., Peptococcaceae SCADC1_2_3, Anaerolineae lineage and Pelotomaculum), and homoacetogenic bacteria ("Candidatus Acetothermia") with a few archaeal representatives (e.g., Methanomassiliicoccaceae, Methanobacteriaceae, and members of the Bathyarcheia class), suggesting a role of H2 in microenvironment functioning. Monoaromatic hydrocarbon biodegradation is carried out by sulfate reducers and favored by concentrated biomass and slightly acidic conditions, which suggests that biodegradation should preferably occur in biofilms present on the surfaces of aquifer rock, rather than by planktonic bacteria. A simplified bacterial community, which was able to degrade monoaromatic hydrocarbons at atmospheric pressure over several months, was selected for incubation experiments at in situ pressure (i.e., 90bar). These showed that the abundance of various bacterial genera was altered, while taxonomic diversity was mostly unchanged. The candidate phylum Acetothermia was characteristic of the community incubated at 90bar. This work suggests that even if pressures on the order of 90bar do not seem to select for obligate piezophilic organisms, modifications of the thermodynamic equilibria could favor different microbial assemblages from those observed at atmospheric pressure.

5.
Environ Microbiol ; 21(10): 3953-3964, 2019 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31314939

RESUMO

Around the world, several dozen deep sedimentary aquifers are being used for storage of natural gas. Ad hoc studies of the microbial ecology of some of them have suggested that sulfate reducing and methanogenic microorganisms play a key role in how these aquifers' communities function. Here, we investigate the influence of gas storage on these two metabolic groups by using high-throughput sequencing and show the importance of sulfate-reducing Desulfotomaculum and a new monophyletic methanogenic group. Aquifer microbial diversity was significantly related to the geological level. The distance to the stored natural gas affects the ratio of sulfate-reducing Firmicutes to deltaproteobacteria. In only one aquifer, the methanogenic archaea dominate the sulfate-reducers. This aquifer was used to store town gas (containing at least 50% H2 ) around 50 years ago. The observed decrease of sulfates in this aquifer could be related to stimulation of subsurface sulfate-reducers. These results suggest that the composition of the microbial communities is impacted by decades old transient gas storage activity. The tremendous stability of these gas-impacted deep subsurface microbial ecosystems suggests that in situ biotic methanation projects in geological reservoirs may be sustainable over time.


Assuntos
Archaea/metabolismo , Deltaproteobacteria/metabolismo , Desulfotomaculum/metabolismo , Firmicutes/metabolismo , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia , Gás Natural , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Geologia , Água Subterrânea/microbiologia , Microbiota , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Sulfatos/metabolismo
6.
Microb Biotechnol ; 10(2): 469-479, 2017 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27766749

RESUMO

The formation water of a deep aquifer (853 m of depth) used for geological storage of natural gas was sampled to assess the mono-aromatic hydrocarbons attenuation potential of the indigenous microbiota. The study of bacterial diversity suggests that Firmicutes and, in particular, sulphate-reducing bacteria (Peptococcaceae) predominate in this microbial community. The capacity of the microbial community to biodegrade toluene and m- and p-xylenes was demonstrated using a culture-based approach after several hundred days of incubation. In order to reveal the potential for biodegradation of these compounds within a shorter time frame, an innovative approach named the solution hybrid selection method, which combines sequence capture by hybridization and next-generation sequencing, was applied to the same original water sample. The bssA and bssA-like genes were investigated as they are considered good biomarkers for the potential of toluene and xylene biodegradation. Unlike a PCR approach which failed to detect these genes directly from formation water, this innovative strategy demonstrated the presence of the bssA and bssA-like genes in this oligotrophic ecosystem, probably harboured by Peptococcaceae. The sequence capture by hybridization shows significant potential to reveal the presence of genes of functional interest which have low-level representation in the biosphere.


Assuntos
Água Subterrânea/microbiologia , Hidrocarbonetos Aromáticos/metabolismo , Metagenômica/métodos , Peptococcaceae/isolamento & purificação , Peptococcaceae/metabolismo , Biota , Biotransformação , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala , Hibridização de Ácido Nucleico , Peptococcaceae/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA
7.
Int J Syst Evol Microbiol ; 66(11): 4329-4338, 2016 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27473224

RESUMO

Two novel strictly anaerobic bacteria, strains Bs105T and Bs107T, were isolated from a deep aquifer-derived hydrocarbonoclastic community. The cells were rod-shaped, not motile and had terminal spores. Phylogenetic affiliation and physiological properties revealed that these isolates belong to two novel species of the genus Desulfotomaculum. Optimal growth temperatures for strains Bs105T and Bs107T were 42 and 45 °C, respectively. The estimated G+C content of the genomic DNA was 42.9 and 48.7 mol%. For both strains, the major cellular fatty acid was palmitate (C16 : 0). Specific carbon fatty acid signatures of Gram-positive bacteria (iso-C17 : 0) and sulfate-reducing bacteria (C17 : 0cyc) were also detected. An insertion was revealed in one of the two 16S rRNA gene copies harboured by strain Bs107T. Similar insertions have previously been highlighted among moderately thermophilic species of the genus Desulfotomaculum. Both strains shared the ability to oxidize aromatic acids (Bs105T: hydroquinone, acetophenone, para-toluic acid, 2-phenylethanol, trans-cinnamic acid, 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde, benzyl alcohol, benzoic acid 4-hydroxybutyl ester; Bs107T: ortho-toluic acid, benzoic acid 4-hydroxybutyl ester). The names Desulfotomaculum aquiferis sp. nov. and Desulfotomaculum profundi sp. nov. are proposed for the type strains Bs105T (=DSM 24088T=JCM 31386T) and Bs107T (=DSM 24093T=JCM 31387T).


Assuntos
Desulfotomaculum/classificação , Água Subterrânea/microbiologia , Gás Natural , Filogenia , Técnicas de Tipagem Bacteriana , Composição de Bases , DNA Bacteriano/genética , Desulfotomaculum/genética , Desulfotomaculum/isolamento & purificação , Ácidos Graxos/química , França , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA
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