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Biophysical flocculation reduces variability of cohesive sediment settling velocity

Communications Earth & Environment 2023 17 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.
Leiping Ye, Leiping Ye, Jorge A. Penaloza‐Giraldo, A. J. Manning, A. J. Manning, J. Holyoke, J. Holyoke, Tian‐Jian Hsu

Summary

Researchers measured how biological substances called extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) — sticky molecules produced by microorganisms — influence how sediment particles clump together and sink in water. They found that EPS dramatically reduces the variability in how fast sediment settles, helping explain why lab results often differ from real-world ocean observations.

Abstract Biophysical cohesion, introduced predominantly by Extracellular Polymeric Substances (EPS) during mineral flocculation in subaqueous environments, plays important role in morphodynamics, biogeochemical cycles and ecosystem processes. However, the mechanism of how EPS functioning with cohesive particles and affects settling behaviors remain poorly understood. We measure initial flocculation rate, floc size and settling velocity of mineral and artificial EPS (Xanthan gum) mixtures. Combining results from these and previous studies demonstrate coherent intensification of EPS-related flocculation compare with those of pure mineral and oil-mineral mixtures. Importantly, the presence of EPS fundamentally changes floc structure and reduces variability of settling velocity. Measured data shows that ratios of microfloc and macrofloc settling velocity for pure mineral flocs is 3.9 but greatly reduced to a lowest value of 1.6 due to biological EPS addition. The low variability of settling velocity due to EPS participation explains the seemingly inconsistent results previously observed between field and laboratory studies.

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