HYDROCARBON FINGERPRINTING FOR APPLICATION IN FORENSIC GEOLOGY - REVIEW WITH CASE-STUDIES

被引:0
|
作者
BRUCE, LG
SCHMIDT, GW
机构
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Forensic geology, the application of the science to the law has required detailed classification, identification, and fingerprinting of hydrocarbons. One does not need to be a chemist to understand practical concepts or to use the basic techniques of hydrocarbon fingerprinting. Currently, the best overall tool for this is a chromatogram derived from capillary column gas chromatography (GC). just as hardness and cleavage identify rock minerals and x-ray angles help identify clay minerals, retention time on a chromatogram can help identify key hydrocarbons, such as normal paraffins. Similarly, as suites of minerals are used to classify rocks, n-paraffin ranges can be used to classify hydrocarbon mixtures such as gasoline, diesel fuel, or crude oil. Refined and crude petroleum may be distinguished on a chromatogram by the range of n-paraffins in a mixture, the shape of the n-paraffin envelope, the presence or absence of olefins, and the presence and relative abundance of certain hydrocarbon additives. Crude oils tend to have a wide range of n-paraffins whose envelope is asymmetric and includes a tail of heavier hydrocarbons, Refined products have a more limited n-paraffin range. With some notable exceptions, such as gasoline, the envelope of most refined products is bell shaped. Olefins are an artifact of the refining process and are not present in crudes. Methylcyclohexane is relatively abundant in crudes and condensates, and less abundant in gasolines. Isooctane and aromatics are more abundant in premium gasolines than in condensates and crudes. Fuel additives such as tetraethyl lead, methyl tertiary butyl ether, ethyl tertiary butyl ether, tertiary butyl alcohol, and ethanol do not exist in crudes. This paper uses case histories to illustrate fingerprinting techniques. Case one matches the fingerprint of a plume to a specific source. Case two eliminates casing-head condensate as the source of a plume and tags processed natural-gas liquids as the probable source. Case three illustrates how other organic compounds may be mistakenly identified as hydrocarbon contamination, and case four differentiates refined products.
引用
收藏
页码:1692 / 1710
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Hydrocarbon fingerprinting for application in forensic geology: review with case studies
    Bruce, Lyle G.
    Schmidt, Gene W.
    American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, 1994, 78 (11): : 1692 - 1710
  • [2] CASE-STUDIES OF CURRENT TRENDS IN DEVELOPMENT GEOLOGY
    LIVINGSTON, ND
    AAPG BULLETIN-AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGISTS, 1987, 71 (05): : 584 - 584
  • [3] FORENSIC ENTOMOLOGY IN THE HAWAIIAN-ISLANDS - 3 CASE-STUDIES
    GOFF, ML
    ODOM, CB
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF FORENSIC MEDICINE AND PATHOLOGY, 1987, 8 (01): : 45 - 50
  • [4] NEUTROPHIL DYSFUNCTION - CASE-STUDIES AND REVIEW
    KATZIN, WE
    BARNA, BP
    CLOUGH, JD
    CLEMENTS, MA
    CLEVELAND CLINIC QUARTERLY, 1986, 53 (03): : 299 - 306
  • [5] MYELODYSPLASTIC SYNDROMES - A REVIEW WITH CASE-STUDIES
    LOTSPEICHSTEININGER, CA
    MCKENZIE, SB
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY, 1987, 4 (01): : 5 - 11
  • [6] Application of isotopic fingerprinting in nuclear forensic investigations: A case study
    Mayer, K
    Rasmussen, G
    Hild, M
    Zuleger, E
    Ottmar, H
    Abousahl, S
    Hrnecek, E
    ADVANCES IN DESTRUCTIVE AND NON-DESTRUCTIVE ANALYSIS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND NUCLEAR FORENSICS, 2003, : 63 - 70
  • [7] A CASE FOR CASE-STUDIES
    LONG, DR
    FOREIGN LANGUAGE ANNALS, 1986, 19 (03) : 225 - 229
  • [8] CASE-STUDIES
    SHERLOCK, S
    HADZIYANNIS, S
    NISHIOKA, M
    PERRILLO, RP
    SCHIFF, ER
    TREPO, C
    GUT, 1993, 34 (02) : S81 - S86
  • [9] THE CASE FOR CASE-STUDIES
    NIEMYER, ES
    TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT, 1995, 49 (01): : 50 - 52
  • [10] FT-IR MICROSCOPY FOR FORENSIC FIBER ANALYSIS - THE RESULTS OF CASE-STUDIES
    TUNGOL, MW
    MONTASER, A
    BARTICK, EG
    7TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FOURIER TRANSFORM SPECTROSCOPY, 1989, 1145 : 308 - 309