Abstract

This study examines the effect of dispersant and oil properties on the aerosolization of fresh and weathered surface crude oil slicks by bursting of a plume of ∼0.7 mm bubbles. A scanning mobility particle sizer measures the size distribution of aerosols in the 20-400 nm range in a clean air chamber. The 500-μm-thick slicks contain oils with varying origin, viscosity, interfacial tension, and weathering state. Test are performed with and without premixed dispersant (Corexit 9500A), which reduces the oil-seawater interfacial tension by 2 orders of magnitude at a dispersant-to-oil ratio (DOR) of 1:25. When compared to aerosolization in clean seawater, the nano-aerosol concentration decreases for slicks without dispersant but increases by 27%-351% upon introduction of dispersant. For most cases, the airborne nanodroplet concentration increases with decreasing Capillary or Morton numbers as well as the ratio of the so-called inner to thermal length scales. To explain the airborne nanodroplet generation in an oil-dispersant mixture, we show that prior to bubble injection, even minimal agitation of the interface causes generation of a subsurface cloud of nanodroplets that diffuses away from the interface. This process appears to be caused by thermal capillary instability when the interfacial tension is low enough to increase the thermal length scale to a few nanometers.

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