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The interactions of oil droplets with filter feeders: A fluid mechanics approach.

Marine environmental research (2020-07-15)
Francis Letendre, Sasan Mehrabian, Stephane Etienne, Christopher B Cameron
RESUMEN

Filter feeding animals capture and lose oil droplets using cilia or ramified appendages. Here we demonstrate that copepod and barnacle appendages capture fish, canola and 1-decanol oil droplets up to 11μm without selectivity for size, chemistry, density, viscosity, or interfacial tension. Following capture, the droplets are ingested or lost via detachment. Capture and detachment did not differ between a barnacle appendage and stainless-steel wires of radii Rf=50 and 250μm. Key parameters to detachment include the ratio of oil droplet radius to fiber radius, and the Weber number. Smaller oil droplet size to fiber size ratio r=Ro∕Rf, required a higher We for detachment. These data plot as a curve that predicts whether a droplet will remain captured or detach and re-enter the fluid stream, based on the fluid, the droplet radius to fiber radius ratio, and the oil droplet properties. Significantly, this curve may be used to plan responses to oil spills in marine environments.

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1-Decanol, ≥98%, FCC, FG