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Impact of coagulation characteristics on the aggregation of microplastics in upper-ocean turbulence

Advances in Water Resources 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.
Mona Rahmani, Cristina Romera‐Castillo Mona Rahmani, Mona Rahmani, Cristina Romera‐Castillo Federico Pizzi, Federico Pizzi, Federico Pizzi, Federico Pizzi, Mona Rahmani, Francesc Peters, Francesc Peters, Cristina Romera‐Castillo Cristina Romera‐Castillo Mona Rahmani, Cristina Romera‐Castillo Lluís Jofre, Joan Grau, Francesc Peters, Cristina Romera‐Castillo Cristina Romera‐Castillo Francesco Capuano, Francesc Peters, Cristina Romera‐Castillo Cristina Romera‐Castillo Joan Grau, Lluís Jofre, Cristina Romera‐Castillo Joan Grau, Francesco Capuano, Joan Grau, Francesco Capuano, Mona Rahmani, Mona Rahmani, Lluís Jofre, Lluís Jofre, Lluís Jofre, Francesco Capuano, Francesco Capuano, Cristina Romera‐Castillo Cristina Romera‐Castillo Cristina Romera‐Castillo Cristina Romera‐Castillo

Summary

This study investigated how coagulation conditions affect microplastic aggregation in water treatment, finding that coagulant type and dose significantly influence floc formation with plastic particles and ultimately removal efficiency.

Study Type Environmental

The dynamics and aggregation of microplastics in marine environments are investigated through high-fidelity direct numerical simulations with Lagrangian point-particle tracking. The properties of microplastics and biogenic particles, including size, density, and concentration, align with scenarios typical of seawater systems. The stickiness nature of microplastics, induced by biofilm formation (biofouling), is modeled through coagulation efficiency (stickiness parameter), which represents the probability of aggregation following a collision event. Two main aspects are at the core of the present work: analyzing the mechanisms of collision and coalescence between microplastics and biogenic particles, along with their spatial distribution, and characterizing the emerging aggregates. The results indicate that particles stickiness, concentration and (especially) size impact on the collision and coalescence rates. Furthermore, microplastics exhibit a strong tendency to accumulate near biogenic particles, leading to the creation of hetero-aggregates whose tendency to sink supports the general hypothesis of “missing microplastics”. Particularly, in cases where microplastics and biogenic particles are evenly concentrated, microplastics primarily contribute to the formation of aggregates. The stickiness mainly determines the most complex and large aggregates, which are less than 1% of the total. • Microparticles model within upper-ocean turbulence is examined. • Properties of microparticles influence their dynamics and aggregate formation. • Wide range of aggregates created, including both lighter and heavier than water. • Aggregates formation makes microplastics sink by coagulating with biogenic material.

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