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A review on the sinking mechanisms for oil and successful response technologies

Abstract

A rise in the shipping of heavier hydrocarbon products increases the potential for an oil to sink after a spill. Further, sunken oil is difficult to locate and recover, and appropriate response technologies depend on the sinking mechanism. In this review, principal sinking mechanisms for oil are described and appropriate response technologies are suggested. Then, models appropriate for tracking sunken oil are compared. Oil may sink as burn residue, microscopic oil-particle aggregates (OPAs) or macroscopic oil-sediment mixtures (OSMs), marine oil snow during a MOSSFA event, or due to its high density. The most common mechanism is by sediment entrainment, and in such scenarios manual recovery has been reported as a successful response option. Among oil tracking models, trajectory models and Bayesian oil search models are compared for sunken oil capabilities. Many oil spill models require hydrodynamic inputs, whereas Bayesian models infer parameters based on available field concentration and bathymetric data.

Category

Academic literature review

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Mary Jacketti
  • Cynthia Juyne Beegle-Krause
  • James D. Englehardt

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Ocean / Climate and Environment
  • University of Miami

Date

04.09.2020

Year

2020

Published in

Marine Pollution Bulletin

ISSN

0025-326X

Volume

160:111626

Page(s)

1 - 11

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository