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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Towards realistic predictions of microplastic fiber transport in aquatic environments: Secondary motions

Water Research 2022 50 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.
Clarence Edward Choi, Jiaqi Zhang Jiaqi Zhang Jiaqi Zhang Jiaqi Zhang Jiaqi Zhang Jiaqi Zhang Jiaqi Zhang Jiaqi Zhang Clarence Edward Choi, Clarence Edward Choi, Clarence Edward Choi, Clarence Edward Choi, Jiaqi Zhang Zhengyu Liang, Jiaqi Zhang Jiaqi Zhang

Summary

Researchers developed an improved drag model for predicting microplastic fiber settling in water by incorporating secondary motions including tumbling and oscillation in addition to the standard drag forces. Secondary motions profoundly affect settling trajectories and deposited positions, and the new model outperforms existing approaches that neglect these behaviors.

Microplastics fibers are abundant in aquatic environments and are an emerging environmental threat. Understanding how fibers are transported in aquatic environments is essential for identifying pollution hotspots and developing remediation strategies. Over recent years, an increasing number of drag models have been proposed to describe the transport of microplastics in aquatic environments. However, none of the proposed models consider secondary motions, which are responsible for non-vertical settling motions. To investigate the role of secondary motions, an experimental setup with an image processing technique was developed to capture the spatial-temporal kinematics of microplastic fibers settling in quiescent water. A new drag model, which adopts the crosswise sphericity to consider the effects of secondary motions of a microplastic fiber and the Aschenbrenner shape factor to account for the unique morphology of the microplastic fiber, was proposed and evaluated. Secondary motions of microplastic fibers have profound effects on their settling trajectories and deposited positions. The settling motion and drag coefficient of a microplastic fiber is an orientation-dependent process. Moreover, the secondary motion is strongly dependent on the fiber dimension and density. The here-proposed drag model is proven to more accurately characterize the settling motion of microplastic fibers compared to existing models that neglect secondary motions. The methodology and model from this study can be used to progress towards improved and realistic predictions of the transport of microplastic fibers in aquatic environments.

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