A novel 3D volumetric method for directly quantifying porosity and pore space morphology in flocculated suspended sediments

  • Tom Lawrence
  • , Simon Carr
  • , Andrew Manning
  • , Jonathan Wheatland
  • , Andy Bushby
  • , Kate Spencer

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

Abstract

Flocculated suspended sediments (flocs) are found in a variety of environments globally, and their transport and behavior bear substantial importance to several industries including fisheries, aquaculture, and shipping. Additionally, the modelling of their behavior is important for estuarine and coastal flood prediction and defence, and the process of flocculation occurs in other unrelated industries such as paper and chemical production. Floc porosity is conventionally assessed using inferential indirect or proxy data approaches. These methods underestimate floc porosity % by c. 30% and cannot measure the micro-scale complexity of these pore spaces and networks, rendering inputs to models sub-optimal. This study introduces a novel 3D porosity and pore space quantification protocol, that produces directly quantified porosity % and pore space data. • 3D floc data from micro-CT scanning is segmented volumetrically. • This segmented volume is quantified to extract porosity and several pore space parameters from the floc structure.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)101975
JournalMethodsX
Volume10
Early online date28 Dec 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished online - 28 Dec 2022

Keywords

  • Estuary sediments
  • Flocculation
  • Porosity quantification
  • Pore space

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