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A comparison of Eulerian and Lagrangian methods for vertical particle transport in the water column

Geoscientific model development 2023 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Tor Nordam, Tor Nordam, Tor Nordam, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Tor Nordam, Tor Nordam, Tor Nordam, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Ruben Kristiansen, Ruben Kristiansen, Ruben Kristiansen, Ruben Kristiansen, Ruben Kristiansen, Ruben Kristiansen, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Raymond Nepstad, Raymond Nepstad, Raymond Nepstad, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Raymond Nepstad, Erik van Sebille Tor Nordam, Tor Nordam, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille Andy M. Booth, Andy M. Booth, Erik van Sebille Erik van Sebille

Summary

This modeling study compared two mathematical approaches — Eulerian and Lagrangian — for simulating how particles like microplastics move vertically through the ocean water column. Both methods produced equivalent results, but Lagrangian (particle-tracking) methods handle a wide range of particle sizes and densities more naturally than Eulerian methods. Accurate transport models are important for predicting where microplastics end up in the ocean and at what depths they accumulate, which informs risk assessments for marine organisms.

Abstract. A common task in oceanography is to model the vertical movement of particles such as microplastics, nanoparticles, mineral particles, gas bubbles, oil droplets, fish eggs, plankton, or algae. In some cases, the distribution of the vertical rise or settling velocities of the particles in question can span a wide range, covering several orders of magnitude, often due to a broad particle size distribution or differences in density. This requires numerical methods that are able to adequately resolve a wide and possibly multi-modal velocity distribution. Lagrangian particle methods are commonly used for these applications. A strength of such methods is that each particle can have its own rise or settling speed, which makes it easy to achieve a good representation of a continuous distribution of speeds. An alternative approach is to use Eulerian methods, where the partial differential equations describing the transport problem are solved directly with numerical methods. In Eulerian methods, different rise or settling speeds must be represented as discrete classes, and in practice, only a limited number of classes can be included. Here, we consider three different examples of applications for a water column model: positively buoyant fish eggs, a mixture of positively and negatively buoyant microplastics, and positively buoyant oil droplets being entrained by waves. For each of the three cases, we formulate a model for the vertical transport based on the advection–diffusion equation with suitable boundary conditions and, in one case, a reaction term. We give a detailed description of an Eulerian and a Lagrangian implementation of these models, and we demonstrate that they give equivalent results for selected example cases. We also pay special attention to the convergence of the model results with an increasing number of classes in the Eulerian scheme and with the number of particles in the Lagrangian scheme. For the Lagrangian scheme, we see the 1/Np convergence, as expected for a Monte Carlo method, while for the Eulerian implementation, we see a second-order (1/Nk2) convergence with the number of classes.

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