The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions

Microplastics is an emerging pollutant that are increasingly detected in major rivers around the world. They are potentially harmful to the natural environment due to their toxicity and potential for bioaccumulation. Yet much of the plastics today remain “missing” as transport and sink mechanisms of...

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Main Author: Chan, Hui Ling
Other Authors: Chiew Yee Meng
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78385
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-783852023-03-03T16:57:55Z The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions Chan, Hui Ling Chiew Yee Meng Jonathan Pearson School of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Warwick DRNTU::Engineering::Environmental engineering Microplastics is an emerging pollutant that are increasingly detected in major rivers around the world. They are potentially harmful to the natural environment due to their toxicity and potential for bioaccumulation. Yet much of the plastics today remain “missing” as transport and sink mechanisms of plastics and microplastics has not been properly studied. This study develops a novel method to track microplastic movement where spherical Polyethylene (PE) microplastics of size ranging from 40 to 46µm is stained using Nile Red. The dispersion behaviour of microplastics is subsequently studied by predicting the longitudinal dispersion coefficient from the standard Advection-Dispersion (ADE) Model at uniform flow discharges, and with the addition of a weir. Stable fluorescence detection of the microplastics in the water is achieved. This method proves to be successful in tracking the temporal concentration distribution of microplastics in the flow, producing a similar dispersion curve to conventional dye tracers. A comparison of the microplastics coefficients with that of Rhodamine WT further reveals that Polyethylene microplastics disperses in a similar manner as Rhodamine in the water column. This marks the potential of using Rhodamine WT as a proxy to study the dispersion characteristics of microplastics in natural rivers. Bachelor of Engineering (Environmental Engineering) 2019-06-19T06:19:12Z 2019-06-19T06:19:12Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78385 en Nanyang Technological University 89 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Environmental engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Environmental engineering
Chan, Hui Ling
The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions
description Microplastics is an emerging pollutant that are increasingly detected in major rivers around the world. They are potentially harmful to the natural environment due to their toxicity and potential for bioaccumulation. Yet much of the plastics today remain “missing” as transport and sink mechanisms of plastics and microplastics has not been properly studied. This study develops a novel method to track microplastic movement where spherical Polyethylene (PE) microplastics of size ranging from 40 to 46µm is stained using Nile Red. The dispersion behaviour of microplastics is subsequently studied by predicting the longitudinal dispersion coefficient from the standard Advection-Dispersion (ADE) Model at uniform flow discharges, and with the addition of a weir. Stable fluorescence detection of the microplastics in the water is achieved. This method proves to be successful in tracking the temporal concentration distribution of microplastics in the flow, producing a similar dispersion curve to conventional dye tracers. A comparison of the microplastics coefficients with that of Rhodamine WT further reveals that Polyethylene microplastics disperses in a similar manner as Rhodamine in the water column. This marks the potential of using Rhodamine WT as a proxy to study the dispersion characteristics of microplastics in natural rivers.
author2 Chiew Yee Meng
author_facet Chiew Yee Meng
Chan, Hui Ling
format Final Year Project
author Chan, Hui Ling
author_sort Chan, Hui Ling
title The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions
title_short The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions
title_full The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions
title_fullStr The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions
title_full_unstemmed The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions
title_sort transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78385
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