Realistic estimates of floc porosity based on high resolution 3D X-Ray microtomography
Abstract
Suspended particulate matter (SPM) plays a fundamental role in the impact and fate of sediment, pollutants, pathogens, nutrients and manufactured nano-materials in aquatic environments. SPM usually exists in aquatic systems as flocs; complex, fragile and loosely-bound aggregates of fine sediment particles, bacteria, organic matter and pore space. Floc settling velocity is widely considered the most important dynamic characteristic that determines SPM fate and transport, and is dependent on size, shape, density, porosity, fractal dimension and composition of the flocs formed in suspension. Of these, floc density and porosity exert the greatest impact on settling velocity, yet neither parameter can currently be measured. As such, transport model parameters are typically estimated from Stokes' Law, based on assumption of a spherical shape for the floc. Due to a lack of available observational data, such assumptions cannot be validated and porosity is often omitted with flocs treated as impermeable spherical entities, despite pores accounting for much of the defined 'floc-space' (often estimated to be >90% within larger flocs).
Within a wider project exploring the 3D nature of floc structure and dynamics (NERC-3D Flocs), this study reports a first application of 3D X-Ray microtomography on populations of flocs, offering a method that quantifies 3D floc porosity based on observation rather than assumption of floc structural properties. High resolution (3 µm voxel size) scans of both laboratory-generated and natural floc populations are presented from which sub-populations of different-sized micro- and macro-flocs (30 in 5 size categories for each floc population) are extracted. A data-processing workflow is presented which applies 3D morphological filters to define a realistic expression of the total pore-space associated with individual flocs. Floc pore-space is partitioned into isolated and effective pores, based on a 12µm pore throat threshold below which fluid flow is hydrodynamically minimal. Analysis of these realistic floc porosity data populations show that previous assumptions of floc porosity lack meaning in terms of settling dynamics. Substitution with meaningful, realistic floc porosity has a significant impact on prediction of floc settling velocity within SPM sediment transport models.- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2019
- Bibcode:
- 2019AGUFMEP11A..07C
- Keywords:
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- 1861 Sedimentation;
- HYDROLOGY;
- 3022 Marine sediments: processes and transport;
- MARINE GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS;
- 4863 Sedimentation;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL;
- 4558 Sediment transport;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL