Abstract

AbstractStommel Retention Zones (SRZs) associated with wind‐driven Langmuir circulation (LC) facilitate the subsurface retention of particles and thus affect processes such as oil spill dispersion, sediment suspension, oil–particle aggregation, and plankton distribution. Since the effect of SRZs on these processes is difficult to study in the field, we present a novel laboratory facility designed to recreate the counterrotating vortex pair flow pattern associated with small‐scale SRZs of various strengths in two dimensions (2D). We then inject an oil jet into this facility to study buoyant oil droplet retention in these SRZs. 2D particle image velocimetry and hybrid Reynolds‐averaged Navier–Stokes/large eddy simulation are used to characterize the flow. Large‐scale oil droplet trajectories in the SRZs are visualized, and oil droplet statistics in the downwelling region and vortex core are measured using high‐magnification brightfield imaging and a droplet detection algorithm. Values of maximum velocity (7.7–32.2 mm s−1), turbulent kinetic energy (10−6 to 10−4 m2 s−2), and turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate (10−7 to 10−5 m2 s−3) in the downwelling region of the facility fall within the range of values observed in the field. Flow field strength strongly influences oil droplet trajectories, the shape and size of the SRZ, and oil droplet statistics over time, with stronger flows retaining larger oil droplets in the downwelling region over longer periods of time. Indeed, droplets of almost 400 μm diameter are observed in the downwelling region after almost 10 min for the strongest flow. The facility may be used to study the behavior of microplastics, sediments, and zooplankton in LC in the future.

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