Effects of oil and dispersant on formation of marine oil snow and transport of oil hydrocarbons

Fu, J; Gong, Y; Zhao, X; O'Reilly, SE; Zhao, D

HERO ID

2902385

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2014

Language

English

PMID

25420231

HERO ID 2902385
In Press No
Year 2014
Title Effects of oil and dispersant on formation of marine oil snow and transport of oil hydrocarbons
Authors Fu, J; Gong, Y; Zhao, X; O'Reilly, SE; Zhao, D
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 48
Issue 24
Page Numbers 14392-14399
Abstract This work explored the formation mechanism of marine oil snow (MOS) and the associated transport of oil hydrocarbons in the presence of a stereotype oil dispersant, Corexit EC9500A. Roller table experiments were carried out to simulate natural marine processes that lead to formation of marine snow. We found that both oil and the dispersant greatly promoted the formation of MOS, and MOS flocs as large as 1.6-2.1 mm (mean diameter) were developed within 3-6 days. Natural suspended solids and indigenous microorganisms play critical roles in the MOS formation. The addition of oil and the dispersant greatly enhanced the bacterial growth and extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) content, resulting in increased flocculation and formation of MOS. The dispersant not only enhanced dissolution of n-alkanes (C9-C40) from oil slicks into the aqueous phase, but facilitated sorption of more oil components onto MOS. The incorporation of oil droplets in MOS resulted in a two-way (rising and sinking) transport of the MOS particles. More lower-molecular-weight (LMW) n-alkanes (C9-C18) were partitioned in MOS than in the aqueous phase in the presence of the dispersant. The information can aid in our understanding of dispersant effects on MOS formation and oil transport following an oil spill event.
Doi 10.1021/es5042157
Pmid 25420231
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English