Immiscible Rayleigh-Taylor Turbulence: Implications for Bacterial Degradation in Oil Spills

Wednesday, 15 October 2025

14h30-15h30 (Tehran) |11h00-12h00 (GMT) |19h00-20h00 (Beijing)

| Speaker

Stefano BRIZZOLARA Senior Postdoctoral Researcher, Princeton University, USA

| Moderator

Mohammad Javad OSTAD MIRZA TEHRANI Director of Water Matters Laboratory (WML)

| Abstract

Immiscible flows at density interfaces are central to many environmental processes, from oil spills in the ocean to contaminant transport in groundwater. A canonical case is the immiscible Rayleigh–Taylor turbulence (IRTT), which develops when heavier water initially overlays lighter oil, such as in deep water oil spills. Unlike classical miscible RT turbulence, where a single mixed phase is generated, IRTT involves the continual deformation, stretching, and fragmentation of fluid interfaces. In this seminar, I will present recent work on the fundamental mechanisms of IRTT and their implications for oil spills. Using laboratory experiments, direct numerical simulations, and theoretical modeling, we quantify how buoyancy driven turbulence fragments the oil-water interface. Our results show that the evolution of the interface follows distinct scaling regimes compared to miscible turbulence, with the development of a capillary wave turbulence cascade originating at the Hinze scale and sustained by Kolmogorov turbulence in the bulk. From an environmental perspective, these findings provide a mechanistic bridge between hydrodynamics and biodegradation, as the surface area made available by IRTT sets the rate at which bacteria can colonize and metabolize hydrocarbons. We demonstrate this link quantitatively, showing that, neglecting the eƯect of turbulence, can lead to an overestimation of the degradation rate by up to 400%.

| Speaker Bio

I am an Italian researcher. I did my undergraduate studies in Italy (university of Genova, Civil and Environmental Engineering). I obtained my Ph.D. from ETH Zurich, Switzerland in February 2024. Afterwards I spent one year and a half in Vienna, at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA BRIDGE postdoc fellowship). Now I am doing my second postdoc at Princeton University (SNF postdoc. mobility fellowship). I am interested in turbulence, with special focus on environmental flows. I have worked on a variety of topics ranging from fundamentals, such as Lagrangian coherent structures, to applied, such as microplastic transport in freshwaters.