P. Brassard et S. Fish, The effect of divalent metals and laminar shear on the formation of large freshwater aggregates, HYDROBIOL, 438(1-3), 2000, pp. 143-155
Aquatic sediment from Hamilton Harbor were suspended under controlled Couet
te shear to measure the changes in particle size distribution when the bulk
concentration of divalent cations Cd2+, Cu2+, Ni2+ and Zn2+ was increased
500 ppb above ambient values. The size distribution of particles followed a
bimodal distribution, at diameters of 20 and 200 mum, and was modeled with
a curvilinear collision model, using a logarithmic size scale to compensat
e for the decreasing density of larger aggregates. Although collision frequ
encies decreased with particle size, there was a limit (160 mum) above whic
h shear no longer affected collision. Addition of divalent metals caused fo
rmation of non-porous large aggregates greater than 300 mum, at shears lowe
r than 3 dynes cm(-2). The sharp increase in aggregate volume that resulted
from metal addition indicated that a partitioning threshold exists in the
harbor, coinciding with an imaginary line along the shore, where wind drive
n agitation causes a bottom shear of 3 dynes cm(-)2. This threshold can be
visualized as the area near shore where bottom sediments consist of sands w
ith nominal size greater than 250 mum. Calculations, using Stoke's settling
, predict settling of large aggregates near thermocline depth, coincident w
ith the appearance of fine clays on the sediment surface.