oil spill cleanup tagged posts

Low-Cost Monitoring Device uses Light to Quickly Detect Oil Spills

Researchers developed a device that uses florescence from oil (left) to detect its presence and identify the type of oil. The small and simple device incorporates inexpensive electronic components (right). Credit: Oscar Sampedro, Universidade de Vigo.

Researchers developed a device that uses florescence from oil (left) to detect its presence and identify the type of oil. The small and simple device incorporates inexpensive electronic components (right). Credit: Oscar Sampedro, Universidade de Vigo.

Simple sensing device could make cleanup easier by identifying the type of oil involved in a spill. The device is designed to float on the water, where it could remotely monitor a small area susceptible to pollution or track the evolution of contamination at a particular location. “Fast detection of a spill is crucial for a quick antipollution response to avoid, as much as possible, the progressive mixture of the oil into the water, which would make cleaning more difficult and inefficient,” said Jose R...

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Newly discovered ‘Blue Whirl’ Fire Tornado burns cleaner for reduced Emissions

This is a blue whirl over water in a swirl generator. Credit: Photo: University of Maryland

This is a blue whirl over water in a swirl generator. Credit: Photo: University of Maryland

Findings could lead to better oil spill cleanup. Fire tornados, or ‘fire whirls,’ pose a powerful and essentially uncontrollable threat to life, property, and the surrounding environment in large urban and wildland fires. But now, a team of researchers in the University of Maryland’s A. James Clark School of Engineering say their discovery of a type of fire tornado they call a ‘blue whirl’ could lead to beneficial new approaches for reducing carbon emissions and improving oil spill cleanup. This previously unobserved flame phenomenon burns nearly soot-free.

“Blue whirls evolve from traditional yellow fire whirls...

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