Microplastic and natural sediment in bed load saltation: material does not dictate the fate
James Lofty, Daniel Valero, Catherine A.M.E. Wilson, M\'ario J. Franca, and Pablo Ouro

TL;DR
This study uses laboratory experiments to compare the transport dynamics of microplastic particles and natural sediments in river flows, finding that material differences do not significantly affect their saltation behavior.
Contribution
It demonstrates that microplastic particles behave similarly to natural sediments in saltation transport, providing a foundation for applying sediment transport knowledge to microplastic pollution.
Findings
Rouse number accurately predicts saltation characteristics for both MPs and sediments.
Saltation trajectory distributions are similar for MPs and natural sediments, with minor differences.
Collision angles and restitution coefficients show negligible differences, indicating similar transport dynamics.
Abstract
Microplastic (MP) pollution is a well document threat to our aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, however, the mechanisms by which MPs are transported in river flows are still unknown. The transport of MPs and natural sediment in aquatic flows could be somewhat comparable, as particles are similar in size. However, it is unknown how the lower density of MPs and their different material properties impact their transport dynamics. To answer this, novel laboratory experiments on bed load saltation dynamics in an open-channel flow, using high-speed camera imaging and the detection of 11,035 individual saltation events were used to identify the similarities and differences between spherical MPs and spherical natural sediments transport. The tested MPs varied in terms of size and material properties (density and elasticity). Our analysis shows that the Rouse number accurately describes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicroplastics and Plastic Pollution
