December 19, 2019
Journal Article

Surface evolution of synthetic bilgewater emulsion

Abstract

Bilgewater is oil-in-water emulsion emitted from shipboard and it is a source of pollution to the ocean. Wastewater treatment needs fundamental knowledge of the bilgewater surface changes; however, limited information is available. We have reported the first surface characterization of synthetic bilgewater emulsion using time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) coupled with optical microscopy. A NAVY synthetic bilgewater emulsion consisting of three oils and a detergent mixture is used as the synthetic bilgewater model. Both fresh and aged emulsion samples are analyzed to determine their droplet size distributions (DSDs) and surface chemical compositions. Our results show that fresh emulsions are largely mono-modal with hydrocarbon fragments as the main surface composition. Aged emulsions are also monomodal with slightly larger size. Both SIMS spectral comparison and Principal Component Analysis (PCA) show that some surfactant components appear on the fresh emulsion surface immediately while larger molecular weight components appear at the aged bilge droplet surface. Our results indicate that the oil-water interface evolves after emulsion droplet forms. More importantly, surface evolution not only changes the bilgewater DSD but also surface chemical composition and reactivity.

Revised: April 9, 2020 | Published: December 19, 2019

Citation

Son J., Y. Shen, J. Yao, D. Paynter, and X. Yu. 2019. Surface evolution of synthetic bilgewater emulsion. Chemosphere 236. PNNL-SA-143088. doi:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.124345