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FluOil—A tool for estimating the transport and deposition of oil-particle aggregates in rivers

January 7, 2026

The FluOil tool was developed to help with planning and early response for oil spills in rivers where subsurface oil-sediment interactions result in the formation of oil-particle aggregates (OPA). The turbulence and variable velocity associated with water flowing within a natural stream channel creates the conditions needed for an oil slick to break up into small droplets and mix in the water column, collide with sediment or organic detritus, and form OPA. This process is similar to what occurs due to wave action along a shoreline. The FluOil tool estimates how fast OPA travel downstream in rivers as well as when and where they may deposit. The FluOil tool relies on pre-existing channel hydraulic data along with user-specified OPA characteristics of size, settling velocity and critical shear stress to compute OPA transport. It is important to know where OPA are transported and accumulated for understanding potential impacts on drinking water intakes, burial of sensitive habitat beds, potential toxicity to benthic organisms, and prolonged sheening from resuspension and breakup. OPA tend to accumulate with fine-grained (silt and clay) sediment deposits (“mud” or “muck”) in backwater areas, oxbows, side channels, pools, and other slow-moving reaches of rivers during low flows. Deposited OPA can be resuspended during high flows, driving continued environmental impact concerns that may extend beyond typical oil spill response timelines.

Publication Year 2026
Title FluOil—A tool for estimating the transport and deposition of oil-particle aggregates in rivers
DOI 10.3133/fs20253055
Authors Faith Fitzpatrick, Collin Roland, Angus Vaughan, Zhenduo Zhu, David Soong, Rachel Sortor
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Fact Sheet
Series Number 2025-3055
Index ID fs20253055
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center; Central Midwest Water Science Center; Upper Midwest Water Science Center
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