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Reducing oil droplet sizes from a subsea oil and gas release by water jetting a laboratory study performed at different scales

Abstract

The main objective of subsea mechanical dispersion (SSMD) is to reduce the oil droplet sizes from a subsea oil release, thereby influencing the fate and behaviour of the released oil in the marine environment. Subsea water jetting was identified as a promising method for SSMD and imply that a water jet is used to reduce the particle size of the oil droplets initially formed from the subsea release. This paper presents the main findings from a study including small-scale testing in a pressurised tank, via laboratory basin testing, to large-scale outdoor basin testing. The effectiveness of SSMD increases with the scale of the experiments. From a five-fold reduction in droplet sizes for small-scale experiments to more than ten-fold for large-scale experiments. The technology is ready for full-scale prototyping and field testing. Large-scale experiments performed at Ohmsett indicate that SSMD could be comparable to subsea dispersant injection (SSDI) in reducing oil droplet sizes.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Ocean / Climate and Environment

Year

2023

Published in

Marine Pollution Bulletin

ISSN

0025-326X

Volume

193

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository