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Oil/Suspended Particulate Material Interactions and Sedimentation
Authors:James R Payne  John R Clayton Jr  Bruce E Kirstein
Institution:a Payne Environmental Consultants, Incorporated, 1991 Village Park Way, Suite 206 B, Encinitas, CA 92024, USA
b AMEC Earth and Environmental, Incorporated, 5510 Morehouse Drive, San Diego, CA 92121, USA
c Consultant, 3129 Hatica, Carlsbad, CA 92009, USA
Abstract:The interactions of physically dispersed oil droplets with suspended particulate material (SPM) can be important for the transport of bulk quantities of spilled crude oil and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) to subtidal sediments. The literature regarding oil/SPM interactions is reviewed, and results from whole-oil droplet/SPM interaction kinetics and pure-component (Prudhoe Bay crude oil distillate cut) equilibrium partitioning experiments are presented. The effects of oil type, SPM characteristics, and salinity on the interaction rates are examined, and the importance of whole-oil droplet/SPM interactions on particle agglomeration and settling behavior are discussed. Whole-oil droplet/SPM interactions are retarded as oil droplet dispersion into the water column is inhibited by oil viscosity increases due to evaporation weathering and water-in-oil emulsification. Compared to whole oil droplet/SPM interactions, dissolved-component/SPM adsorption is not as significant for transport of individual components to sediments. The information presented in this paper can be used to augment computer-based models designed to predict oil-spill trajectories, oil-weathering behavior, and spilled oil impacts to the marine environment.
Keywords:Oil  polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons  suspended particulate material  agglomeration  sedimentation  modeling
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