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Numerical simulation and experimental study of microplastic transport under open channel shear flow: Roles of particle physical properties and flow velocities

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lulu He, Jianhao Jiang, Shiwei Zheng, Nazhen Yu, Yan Zhu, Yan Zhu, Han Wei

Summary

Laboratory flume experiments and Lattice Boltzmann Method simulations showed that horizontal microplastic transport velocity increases with flow velocity while vertical velocity decreases, with particle density and concentration influencing transport behavior in open channel shear flow.

Polymers
Models

Microplastic (MP) transport patterns under open channel shear flow remain unclear. This study investigates the transport laws of MPs at various flow velocities, MP densities, sizes and concentrations in the U-shaped experimental flume and the numerical flume based on Lattice Boltzmann Method (LBM). The results indicate that the average horizontal particle velocity and the transport distances of Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and Polystyrene (PS) particles increase with the average cross-sectional flow velocity, while the average vertical particle velocity decreases with it. The total average particle velocity closely matches the average vertical particle velocity, regardless of the variation in MP size, density and concentration. Formula-based analysis reveals that the acceleration of spherical MP transport mainly depends on the particle size and its consequent relative drag force term (RDFT) under the conditions with a single type of MP particles, but on the particle density and its consequent RDFT and relative gravity term (RGT) in the case concerning different types of MP particles with identical particle sizes. The average horizontal particle velocity maximum of PVC and PS are both strongly correlated with the average flow velocity maximum in the cross-section. This correlation lowers with the MP particle size and concentration, and is independent of MP density. Our findings can provide reference for the prevention and control of MP pollution in rivers.

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