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Volumetric reconstruction of settling mud flocs: A new insight of equilibrium flocculation in saline water.

Authors :
Ye, Leiping
Chen, Zhichao
Chen, Lusheng
Ren, Jie
Wu, Jiaxue
Chen, Yujie
Huang, Xiheng
Chen, Huanjun
Guo, Yiliang
Source :
Water Research. May2024, Vol. 255, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• Fast and batch of settling mud flocs measurement and 3D reconstruction. • Volumetric floc reconstruction improves the accuracy of irregular mud floc sizes. • Stable bimodal volumetric floc size distribution forms in equilibrium flocculation. • Settling velocity keeps stable and low variability between 1 and 2 mm·s−1 in >200 μm. • High Volumetric- but low Mass- Settling Flux in flocs>200 μm due to bio-components. Mud flocculation and settling play key role in understanding sediment transport cycle and affect water quality in estuaries and coastal seas. However, the morphological irregularity and structural instability of fragile mud flocs set huge obstacles for quantifying geometric property accurately and establishing reliable predicting tools in settling dynamics via previous observing strategies based on instant measured and 2-dimensional imagery floc parameterizations. Here we designed a multi-camera apparatus targeting capturing multiple angles of individual flocs, and developed a multi-view segmentation algorithm on floc images analysis. We finally accomplished batch of 3-dimensional reconstruction obtaining each settling floc's volumetric size in equilibrium flocculation. The results indicate a stable bimodal floc size distribution in equilibrium flocculation with a dominant peak of microflocs (<200 μm) and a secondary smaller peak of macroflocs (> 200 μm). The flocculi (<50 μm) shows more spherical outlines with dense structure while the larger-sized macroflocs (>200 μm) have high irregular morphologies with high porosity and visible biological debris attaching, and the microflocs (50–200 μm) tend to be irregular in shape and dense inside. The terminal settling velocity of mud flocs shows increasing with floc size in <200 μm but keeps stable around 1–2 mm s−1 after >200 μm due to the increase in size being compensated by the decrease of density according to the fractal theory on floc geometry. The higher organic matter content within larger porous flocs reduces the macroflocs effective density. These lead to high volumetric settling flux but low mass settling flux of macroflocs in natural water systems. This work provides new insight to reveal more accurate mud floc geometric parameterizations in volumetric aspect and reliable characterizations of equilibrium flocculation using a fast and sound batch of direct measuring approach. This may importantly improve the predictions of suspended mud dynamics in nature. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
255
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176718572
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2024.121512