You only need enough turbulence to spin the molecules around to attract the non-polar, hydrophobic end. Too much and you detach weakly bonded molecules.
Beckett skimmers have their time and place and work on a different principal, so the laws we've discussed here don't necessarily apply to them. They rely on an instant migration as water is fractionated. Downdraft technology creates weakly bonded, realatively unstable bubbles, so a rapid ascent is necessary. A surfactant and POC juggling act, manages to produce an impressive yield. I believe it was a beckett skimmer that won the skimmer comparison here at RC, but I haven't read the thread myself, so I can't qualify the results. Dr. Ron studied the contents of skimmate, but I don't think he elaborated as to what fractionation method was used.
http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2002-12/rs/feature/index.php
I use two huge beckett skimmers on coral systems in a retail store. They skim quite a bit. My only complaints are the injector noise and biweekly cleaning, and the fact that they go on strike if there's a heavy load or hands in the tanks. One of them has been off line for the past five days due to a new anemone shipment. Nothing skimmed in five days is bad news when you need them the most, but it's a situation unique to commercial systems. My experiences with becketts has been a wet foam, so the "bubble popping" principal of phosphate and nitrate removal is well represented.
Perhaps the answer is an assembly-line process, whereby, one technology (Beckett) is used for skimming certain "easy" agents (hydrophobic proteins), while another technology (air-driven) is used to remove the remaining "stubborn" hydrophilic proteins, heavy metals, DOC & POC.