2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147696
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CFD-DEM simulation of the hydrodynamic filtration performance in balaenid whale filter feeding

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…This strategy allows simulation of three-dimensional fluid flow through irregularly shaped porous layers. Previously, to our knowledge, a porous media model has only been applied once to assess flow patterns in an abstraction of a suspension-feeding animal [ 21 ]. In that study, fringes of the baleen of whales were modelled as a porous medium in a simplified, flat-plate configuration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This strategy allows simulation of three-dimensional fluid flow through irregularly shaped porous layers. Previously, to our knowledge, a porous media model has only been applied once to assess flow patterns in an abstraction of a suspension-feeding animal [ 21 ]. In that study, fringes of the baleen of whales were modelled as a porous medium in a simplified, flat-plate configuration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This transport of particles towards the posterior of the fish mouth cavity has been observed endoscopically in live suspension-feeding goldfish, gizzard shad, and ngege tilapia as particles ‘slid’ or ‘bounced’ along the filter surfaces [ 5 ], and is similar to models of a ‘ricochet’ of particles away from manta ray filter surfaces on contact [ 11 ]. Although more accurate methods exist to determine particle trajectories by solving equations of motion of spheres [ 11 ], or by discrete-element modelling [ 21 ], analyses of dividing streamlines using the approach presented here can be informative as a first approximation of particle size selectivity that is accessible to a broader range of researchers. Further evaluations of this approach, for example by comparing its predictions with how cross-step filters handle particles of different sizes, would be valuable.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the case of the whale mouth, this is right at the entrance of the oropharyngeal opening, where prey are swallowed. Accumulation of a bulk slurry of small prey items that have been efficiently separated from undesirable seawater is an optimal form of filtration (Zhu et al, 2020a, Zhu et al, 2020b, Zhu et al, 2021, Zhu et al, 2023). Cross-flow filtration feeding has been well documented in bony fish (Langeland and Nost, 1995;Goodrich et al, 2000;Brainerd, 2001;Cheer et al, 2001;Sanderson et al, 2001;Smith and Sanderson, 2008;Paig-Tran et al, 2011;Cheer et al, 2012;Sanderson et al, 2016;Witkop et al, 2023), sharks (Sims, 2008;Motta et al, 2010;Wegner, 2015), and rays (Paig-Tran et al, 2013;Paig-Tran and Summers, 2014;Divi et al, 2018).…”
Section: Flow-dependent Porosity Determined By Varying Parametersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The characteristics of liquid waste in the form of density, oil and grease, specific gravity, TSS, TDS, sediment grain size, BOD, COD, and other parameters will interact with the flow in a closed channel, and deposition is easier to occur [12,13]. Research on other hydraulic channels has focused on velocity and flow discharge, where results show that velocity affects the flow pattern in pipes and open channels [13][14][15][16][17]. Channel pipe geometric research was done by Changhee et al, 2008 [16], which compared the transportation of a water-sand mixture in circular and square pipes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%