Analysis of Frack Water By Kiersten Briggs and Schuyler Mincemoyer.

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Analysis of Frack Water By Kiersten Briggs and Schuyler Mincemoyer

Transcript of Analysis of Frack Water By Kiersten Briggs and Schuyler Mincemoyer.

Page 1: Analysis of Frack Water By Kiersten Briggs and Schuyler Mincemoyer.

Analysis of Frack WaterBy Kiersten Briggs and Schuyler Mincemoyer

Page 2: Analysis of Frack Water By Kiersten Briggs and Schuyler Mincemoyer.

Objective

An organic analysis of the effects of hydraulic fracturing on well water through GC-MS and FT-IR.

After GC-MS and FT-IR results were found, we also proceeded to run an XRF analysis to determine the metal and alloy makeup of the frack water.

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What is Hydraulic Fracturing? Drilling technique widely utilized for

collecting Natural Gas

Energy from injecting highly-pressurized fracking fluid cracks rocks to release gas

Drilling occurs ~6,200 ft below the surface

Can produce fracturing at least 1,000-1,500 ft away from the initial pressurization point

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What is Hydraulic Fracturing?

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What is Frack Water?

Caused by Hydraulic Fracturing for Natural Gas

Well water speculated to be contaminated by fracking fluid byproducts

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZe1AeH0Qz8

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Suspected Contaminants

We are testing for 5 out of a possible 353 dangerous components of fracking fluid

(632 total components)

Xylene

Benzene

Ethylbenzene

Naphthalene

Toluene

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Procedure

Extract components from water using Separatory Funnel and Hexane

Also attempted using Methylene Chloride for extraction

Run organic layer through the GC-MS and FT-IR

Standard Samples were mixed with hexane and run through each instrument as a reference point

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Results

GC-MS and FT-IR showed no benzene, ethyl benzene, toluene, xylene, or naphthalene present.

An XRF analysis showed that of the metals/alloys in the water, 60% was Sulfur. The other 40% was Silica.

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Conclusions

The benzene derivatives we tested for were not present. Probable causes:

Present in extremely low concentrations

Did not have a good water sample for testing

Gas samples may have left the sample before testing

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Conclusions

The XRF showed a surprising result with 60% sulfur contents within the Frack Water.

Sulfur is present in the shale they fracture during hydraulic fracturing

Sulfur and CO2 are a byproducts of processing natural gas

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For further studies

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LBjSXWQRV8

Shows the breaks in the water from the tap system where the fire lights. Leads to a question of a gas trapped in the pipes, rather than a contaminant of the water itself.

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Questions?