Abstract – Joseph, A. A. (2023). Vol. 3(1), pp. 1-11, March, 2023

Review of Determination of Heavy Metals and Total Petroleum Hydrocarbon Concentrations in Remediated Crude Oil Contaminated Soil

Abstract: The discharge of crude oil products to the environment (soil, water and air) has great negative impacts on the organisms living therein. Most of these effects are from heavy metals, total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH), polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) among others. This research adopts an extensive review of literatures such as conference papers, journal articles, internet sources, books to find out the amount of total metal concentrations and the total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) that are likely to be found on crude oil contaminated soil even after remediation or cleanup activities have been carried out. The driving force behind this research is the fact that the people living in most petroleum-contaminated areas such as the Niger Delta Region of Nigeria still experience some negative effects (such as health and agricultural effects) associated with the crude oil pollutants even after remediation. The study concludes that even though heavy metals were still present in the remediated soil, they are not bioavailable for plants uptake; hence their presence is negligible harmless. On the other hand, the total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) that remains after cleanup is still well above the background level. As such, it would impose negative impacts on the inhabitants of such areas. The study further recommends that more effective methods of remediation should be carried out, or a combination of more than one method should be adopted in other to obtain absolute cleanup of the polluted area..


Keywords: Bioavailability: Contamination: Crude Oil: Heavy Metals: Metal Enrichment Factor: Bioavailability.