Development of an offshore response guidance tool for determining the impact of SSDI on released gas and benzene from artificial subsea oil well blowout simulations
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2022
Abstract
We present an analysis of 2225 simulations of artificial oil well blowouts in nearshore and offshore waters of Newfoundland, Canada. In the simulations, we coupled the VDROP-J and TAMOC models to simulate the fate and transport of oil and gas from the release to the sea surface. Simulations were conducted with and without subsea dispersant injection. We analyzed the simulation database to quantify the mass fraction of oil and gas that surfaces, the mass fraction of released benzene that surfaces, and the horizontal offset to the surfacing zone. These data are also synthesized to yield empirical correlations to predict these output metrics from key input parameters. These correlations are summarized in an excel spreadsheet that allows rapid evaluation of spill dynamics with minimal initial knowledge of spill details. We call this tool an offshore response guidance table, which allows exploration of spill dynamics under diverse spill and response options.
Identifier
85138213430 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Marine Pollution Bulletin
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2022.114114
e-ISSN
18793363
ISSN
0025326X
PubMed ID
36148742
Volume
184
Grant
1.04
Fund Ref
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Recommended Citation
Socolofsky, Scott A.; Jun, Inok; Boufadel, Michel C.; Liu, Ruixue; Lu, Youyu; Arey, J. Samuel; and McFarlin, Kelly M., "Development of an offshore response guidance tool for determining the impact of SSDI on released gas and benzene from artificial subsea oil well blowout simulations" (2022). Faculty Publications. 2563.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/2563