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What are Oil Skimmers?

By Shannon Kietzman
Updated May 17, 2024
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Oil skimmers are pieces of equipment that remove oil floating on the surface of a fluid. These generally work because they are made of materials to which oil is more likely to stick than the fluid it is floating on. At the same time, the fluid has very little attraction to the equipment.

Oil skimmers are usually all that is necessary to remove oil from a liquid. In some cases, however, they may be used to pre-treat a fluid. In this case, they remove as much of the oil as possible before more expensive and time-consuming measures are employed. Pre-treating the fluid this way reduces the overall cost of cleaning the liquid.

There are several different types of oil skimmers, though all designs depend on the laws of gravity and on surface tension in order to function. The six primary types are belt, disk, drum or barrel style, mop, large tube or mini tube, and floating suction oil skimmers.

Belt oil skimmers utilize a belt of stainless steel. This belt is lowered into the liquid that needs to be cleaned. The belt then passes through special wiper blades, which remove the oil from both sides of the liquid as it passes through.

Disk oil skimmers use a disk that is rotated through the liquid. The oil is wiped off the liquid and placed into a special collection container within the skimmer. This type is not a good choice for shallow liquids or for places where the liquid level fluctuates, because it is most effective when the entire disk is immersed.

Drum or barrel style oil skimmers are like the disk version, but they use a rotating drum rather than a disk. In addition, they tend to be more durable and are capable of moving more water than disk oil skimmers. Fluctuation liquid levels, however, are still problematic for drum or barrel skimmers.

Mop oil skimmers use a special type of rope to pick up the oil. The rope dips into the liquid, removing the liquid and the oil. The rope is wrung out with pinch rollers as it goes into the drive unit. When used with high viscosity oils, the ropes in these devices tend to become matted down and lose their effectiveness. In addition, replacement mops can be somewhat costly.

Large tube oil skimmers utilize a plastic hose, which runs over the liquid’s surface and draws the oil in. They can only be used for areas with a large surface area. For smaller surface areas, mini tube versions are a better choice. They work in the same manner, but utilizessmaller hoses.

Floating suction oil skimmers come in a variety of shapes, but each type includes a floating intake. These are best to use with thicker layers of oil.

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Discussion Comments
By anon311644 — On Jan 03, 2013

What are the companies who can manufacture/supply rope mop oil skimmers?

By anon171146 — On Apr 29, 2011

the belts from belt skimmers are mostly made of PE or fabric, not of steel. steel is not flexible enough and also PE got the better adhesive effect. for industrial usage belt skimmers are the no.1 choice.

drum skimmers definitely have no problem with fluctuating fluid levels, because they're free floating on the water surface. they're mostly used on lakes or offshore where larger amounts of oil have to be removed quickly.

for further information please take a look at R.A.W. International.

By anon92284 — On Jun 27, 2010

Excellent article.

By anon88926 — On Jun 07, 2010

Hey why don't you use large skimmers in front of a barge that is as wide as the barge but goes three feet below the water line as the barge moves the oil comes up the belt a squeegee pulls the oil in a truss that goes inside the barge kind of like cutting grass? Ralph

By anon83028 — On May 09, 2010

What a great article! Thumbs up.

By anon74287 — On Apr 01, 2010

Oil Skimmers from SkimTech, Inc. seem to be the best for oil removal.

By anon73961 — On Mar 30, 2010

which is the best material for skimming.

By anon1149 — On May 17, 2007

how reliable is the tube skimmer?

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