Non-cohesive and cohesive sediment transport due to tidal currents and sea waves: A case study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Sediment concentration Waves and currents Suspended/bed load
Fecha
2019Referencia bibliográfica
Díaz-Carrasco, P. et al. Non-cohesive and cohesive sediment transport due to tidal currents and sea waves: A case study. Continental Shelf Research Volume 183, 15 July 2019, Pages 87-102 [10.1016/j.csr.2019.06.008]
Patrocinador
Research group TEP-209 (Junta de Andalucía); Project BIA 2015-65598-P (Secretaría de Estado de I+D+i, Spain); Project 917PTE0538 (CYTED - Programa Iberoamericano de Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo); Spanish Ministry of Education and Professional Training (Research Contract FPU14/03570)Resumen
A model is proposed to determine the sediment transport rate generated by the combined action of sea waves and tidal
currents, the latter being modelled as a sequence of steady currents because of the large values of the Keulegan-
Carpenter number of the tidal flows, which allow to neglect inertial effects in their modelling. The hydrodynamic
module solves Reynolds-averaged momentum equations by introducing a two-equation turbulence model, which
considers also the flow in the region closest to the sea bottom and enforces the no-slip condition and the vanishing of
the turbulent kinetic energy at the bottom without the need to assume the existence of a logarithmic velocity profile
and to fiX the normal derivative of the turbulent kinetic energy close to the sea bed. Hence, the evaluation of the
velocity profile in the near-bed region turns out to be accurate. The sediment transport module determines the sediment
concentration and sediment transport for a miXture of non-cohesive and cohesive sediments. To validate the model, its
predictions are compared with laboratory measurements and field data collected over rippled beds at two different tidal
estuaries. Then, results are obtained for values of the parameters chosen to mimic a site close to Punta Umbría (Huelva,
Spain) and considering different hydrodynamic conditions and different sediment miXtures. The influence of the waves
on the suspended sediment concentration is lower for the cohesive fraction than for the non-cohesive fraction. For all
the sediment miXtures, it turns out that the cohesive fraction is well miXed over the whole water depth, meanwhile the
concentration of the non-cohesive fraction has significant values only near the bottom, thus showing that an accurate
description of turbulence dynamics in the buffer layer and viscous sublayer (if it exists) is important to quantify the
sediment transport rate.





