Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume I and II

(Ben Green) #1

OIL SPILLAGE INTO WATER—TREATMENT 803


conditions. Indeed, telephone poles have been employed in
more than one spill instance as a jury rig emergency mea-
sure. To improve the capacity of such a fl oating barrier, a
weighted skirt is hung from the fl otating member illustrated
in Figure 1. Design requirements for spill booms have been
published by Lehr and Scherer^4 and Hoult,^5 among others.
By a rather cursory inspection of Figure 1, we may now
appreciate some of these requirements such as:
Suffi cient freeboard to prevent overtopping by waves;
Adequate skirt length below water surface to confi ned a
suffi cient quantity of oil;
Adequate fl exibility to permit the boom to bend under
wave action and maintain its retention of the oil spill;

Suffi cient mechanical strength to withstand the forces
imposed by the environment.
Some of the diffi culties of oil retention against the action
of a steady current are illustrated in Figure 1. A discussion
of draw down phenomena by Hoult^6 outlines that a gradient
in oil thickness, h, is established by the stress imposed by
the current fl ow. There is, based on the fl uid dynamics of
the contained volume of oil in the presence of a water cur-
rent, a limiting water velocity above which oil droplets are
entrained and fl ow underneath the barrier.
The deployment of the above described mechanical
booms is also an important consideration. In the event of a
spill, the speed of response is, of course, most critical. Hence,

Flotation
Member

Water


Oil Contained Under
Quiescent Conditions

Oil Containment
Capability Improved

Draw Down Due To
Water Current

Flotation
Member

Water


Weighted
Skirt

Oil


Oil


FIGURE 1 Mechanical boom principle.

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