fuelsoil
Fuelsoil is a term that has appeared in various contexts to describe soils associated with fuels or fuel-derived materials. It is not a single, widely accepted scientific category, and its meaning can vary by discipline. In environmental engineering and soil science, fuelsoil commonly refers to soil that has become contaminated with petroleum hydrocarbons, such as gasoline or diesel, through spills or leaks. In this usage, fuelsoil is characterized by elevated levels of total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH), volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and potentially polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that pose risks to groundwater and ecosystems. Contaminated fuelsoil is typically subject to assessment, monitoring, and remediation under environmental regulations.
In other discussions—often theoretical, industrial, or fictional—fuelsoil has been used to describe soils engineered to interact
Characterization of fuelsoil in the contamination sense relies on standard soil and groundwater analyses. Key metrics
See also: contaminated soil, petroleum hydrocarbon remediation, soil contamination, bioremediation. Notes: The term is informal and