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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of geometry and bottom friction on local bed forms in a tidal embayment

01 Jul 2002-Continental Shelf Research (CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH)-Vol. 22, Iss: 11, pp 1821-1833
TL;DR: In this paper, a 2DH idealized local morphodynamic model for a tidal channel was used to demonstrate that estuarine bars with typical length scales on the order of the tidal excursion length can develop as the result of a positive feedback between water motion, sediment transport and the sandy bottom.
About: This article is published in Continental Shelf Research.The article was published on 2002-07-01 and is currently open access. It has received 75 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Length scale & Suspended load.

Summary (3 min read)

1. Introduction

  • The geomorphology of semi-enclosed tidal embayments with a sandy bed often consists of a complex network of channels and shoals.
  • On the other hand, deeper embayments, e.g. those located in the Dutch and German Wadden Sea, are characterized by a fractal pattern of channels (cf. Cleveringa and Oost, 1999; Ehlers, 1988) which appear to scale with the length of the embayment.
  • Their model results apply to narrow, frictionally dominated tidal channels.
  • The results from the two approaches should qualitatively agree in the appropriate limits.
  • Here, the intermediate model will be compared with the results by Seminara and Tubino (1998).

2. Model description

  • The features studied in this paper have length scales which are small compared with the tidal wavelength, the embayment length and the length scale on which variations of the channel width occur.
  • Within the local model, tidal velocities are of the order of 1 m s 1: Since the amplitude of the sea surface elevations is assumed to be much smaller than the undisturbed water depth, the socalled rigid lid approximation can be adopted.
  • Using a procedure first proposed by Lorentz (1922), see also Zimmerman (1992), the non-linear bottom friction can be linearized in such a way that averaged over one tidal cycle the same amount of energy is dissipated in both formulations.
  • The first term on the right-hand side of Eq. (4) models the sediment pick-up function, and the second term the tendency of sediment to settle due to gravity effects.
  • This seems to be consistent with literature where it is suggested that the transport due to the bed slope terms cannot be neglected (see Parker, 1978; Talmon et al., 1995), even if suspended-load transport dominates.

3. Linear stability analysis

  • For realistic values of the parameters the 2D system of equations, as described in Section 2, allows for a morphodynamic equilibrium solution Weq ¼ ðu; v;rz;C; hÞeq; which is spatially uniform, i.e. they are independent of both the x- and the ycoordinate.
  • Here, ueq ¼ ðueq; 0Þ and u0 ¼ ðu0; v0Þ are the equilibrium and perturbed velocity vector.
  • The ratio of the tidal period and the morphologic timescale is typically of the order of 10 2–10 4: Since Eqs. (8a)–(8d) evolve on the tidal timescale, the bed perturbation h0 in these equations can be considered fixed.
  • The first two terms on the right-hand side of Eq. (13) give the contribution of the divergence of the advective sediment flux Fadv; while the last two terms model the divergences of fluxes due to diffusive processes (Fdiff ) and bedslope effects (Fbed), respectively.
  • The real part of the eigenvalue RðoÞ denotes the growth rate of the perturbation and IðoÞ=k its migration speed.

4. Results

  • In this section results from the local 2D channel model will be described.
  • Default values which are characteristic for the Western Scheldt will be used, see Table 1.
  • In the remainder of this paper, the authors will only consider advective modes, i.e. horizontal dispersion terms in the momentum and concentration equations are neglected ðm ¼.
  • This is justified since the ratio of dispersive to advective fluxes is of the order 10 1–10 3 for the bed form length scales that are considered in this paper.
  • This is also done in the model adopted by Seminara and Tubino (1998).

4.1. Advective instabilities for linear bottom friction

  • 0Þ: Fig. 3 shows the dimensionless growth rate as a function of the dimensionless longitudinal wavenumber k for various values of the lateral number n:.
  • This result is reminiscent from river morphodynamics where this mode is also found to be the most unstable one if bed slope effects are neglected (Callander, 1969).
  • For long waves, sediment transport is mainly driven by the residual velocity perturbation /u0S:.
  • These features will now be explained in more detail.
  • Expression (17) shows that the growth of long-wave perturbations is primarily governed by the residual perturbed velocity /u0S: Fig. 4 shows a typical example of the behaviour of this quantity as the longitudinal wavenumber k varies.

4.2. Bedslope effects

  • The most unstable mode now occurs for finite n: Eigenfunctions with high modenumber n (i.e. fast spatial oscillations in the lateral direction) are damped.
  • For friction values above the neutral curve, bedforms have positive growth rates.
  • The minimum of the neutral curve is referred to as the critical mode for the specified lateral modenumber n and is characterized by the critical wavenumber kcr and friction parameter values rcr:.
  • Since this destabilizing effect has its maximum value for a finite value of k (see Fig. 3), it is to be expected that both rcr and kcr have finite (non-zero) values.

4.3. Non-linear friction and the influence of channel width

  • The authors will extend their model by including non-linear bottom friction, which means that sb in Eq. (2) reads sb ¼ r#rjjujju; ð20Þ where #r ¼ 3pr=ð8UÞ follows from the Lorentz linearization procedure that was mentioned below Eq. (2).
  • The effect of non-linearity on the growth of bedforms can be inferred from Fig. 7 which shows the neutral curves for both linear and nonlinear friction.
  • Also, the most unstable wavenumber shifts towards a higher value, i.e. the critical mode occurs on a shorter longitudinal length scale.
  • The explicit dependence of the non-linear friction parameter #rjjujj on velocity thus yields a decrease of bottom friction above shallow (deep) parts of the channel.
  • So far, the authors have considered a socalled wide channel for which width and tidal excursion length are of the same order of magnitude.

5. Discussion and conclusions

  • The formation of bottom patterns that scale with the tidal excursion length has been studied within a 2D idealized model.
  • In the case that sediment diffusion can be neglected, this instability is mediated by advective processes, in particular through residual flows that arise from tide-topography interactions.
  • Bed slope effects act as a means to prevent the emergence of both longitudinal and lateral smallscale features.
  • All these discrepancies may in principle yield qualitatively different outcome.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a complex process-based model is used to simulate the formation of channels and shoals in a schematised estuary and the dominant wavelengths of channel-shoal patterns are investigated together with their dependency on width and depth of the basin and the local maximum velocity.

67 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a new dataset measured in imagery and bathymetry with bar lengths spanning from centimetres (in experiments) to tens of kilometres was presented, where the authors visually identified and classified 190 sand bars and measured their width, length, height and number of cross-cutting barbs channels.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors experimentally quantify the transverse bed slope effect for a large range of near-bed flow conditions with varying secondary flow intensity, sediment sizes (0.17-4 mm), sediment transport mode, and bed state to test existing predictors.
Abstract: Large-scale morphology, in particular meander bend depth, bar dimensions, and bifurcation dynamics, are greatly affected by the deflection of sediment transport on transverse bed slopes due to gravity and by secondary flows. Overestimating the transverse bed slope effect in morphodynamic models leads to flattening of the morphology, while underestimating leads to unrealistically steep bars and banks and a higher braiding index downstream. However, existing transverse bed slope predictors are based on a small set of experiments with a minor range of flow conditions and sediment sizes, and in practice models are calibrated on measured morphology. The objective of this research is to experimentally quantify the transverse bed slope effect for a large range of near-bed flow conditions with varying secondary flow intensity, sediment sizes (0.17–4 mm), sediment transport mode, and bed state to test existing predictors. We conducted over 200 experiments in a rotating annular flume with counterrotating floor, which allows control of the secondary flow intensity separate from the streamwise flow velocity. Flow velocity vectors were determined with a calibrated analytical model accounting for rough bed conditions. We isolated separate effects of all important parameters on the transverse slope. Resulting equilibrium transverse slopes show a clear trend with varying sediment mobilities and secondary flow intensities that deviate from known predictors depending on Shields number, and strongly depend on bed state and sediment transport mode. Fitted functions are provided for application in morphodynamic modeling.

56 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, numerical solutions of the sediment conservation law are reviewed in terms of their application to bed update schemes in coastal morphological models and it is demonstrated that inadequately formulated numerical techniques lead to the introduction of diffusion, dispersion and the bed elevation oscillations previously reported in the literature.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the location where sand bars form is largely controlled by the excess width of a channel, which is calculated as the observed channel width minus the width of an ideal exponentially widening estuary.
Abstract: Estuaries typically show converging planforms from the sea into the land. Nevertheless, their planform is rarely perfectly exponential and often shows curvature and presence of embayments. Here we test the degree to which the shapes and dimensions of tidal sand bars depend on estuary planform. We assembled a dataset with 35 estuary planforms and properties of 190 tidal bars to induce broad-brush but significant empirical relations between channel planform, hydraulic geometry and bar pattern, and test a linear stability theory for bar pattern. We found that the location where bars form is largely controlled by the excess width of a channel, which is calculated as the observed channel width minus the width of an ideal exponentially widening estuary. In general, the summed width of bars approximates the excess width as measured in the along-channel variation of three estuaries for which bathymetry was available as well as for the local measurements in the 35 investigated estuaries. Bar dimensions can be predicted by either the channel width or the tidal prism, because channel width also strongly depends on local tidal prism. Also braiding index was predicted within a factor 2 from excess width divided by the predicted bar width. Our results imply that estuary planform shape, including mud flats and salt marsh, as well as bar pattern depend on inherited Holocene topography and lithology and that eventually convergent channels will form if sufficient sediment is available.

36 citations


Cites background or methods or result from "The effect of geometry and bottom f..."

  • ...This result contradicts classical tidal bar theory, which predicts that tidal current velocity – or tidal excursion length – determines bar length (Seminara and Tubino, 2001; Schramkowski et al., 2002)....

    [...]

  • ...Second, the empirical predictions are compared with theoretical predictions from stability analysis of Schramkowski et al. (2002)....

    [...]

  • ...Previous studies attempted to predict bar pattern in estuaries using linear stability analyses (Seminara and Tubino, 2001; Schramkowski et al., 2002; see Leuven et al., 2016, for a review)....

    [...]

  • ...velocity – or tidal excursion length – determines bar length (Seminara and Tubino, 2001; Schramkowski et al., 2002)....

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  • ...Landforms, Vol. 43, 172–186 (2018) of Schramkowski et al. (2002) and Crosato and Mosselman (2009)....

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References
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Book
01 Jan 1993

1,962 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...The evolution equation for C reads (Van Rijn, 1993) Ct þ ðuC mCxÞx þ ðvC mCyÞy ¼ S aðu2 þ v2Þ gC; ð4Þ where m denotes the horizontal coefficient for sediment diffusion and S the difference between erosion and sedimentation at the top of the active layer....

    [...]

Book
06 May 1986
TL;DR: The physical concepts governing sediment movement in the sea with the minimum of mathematics have been established in this paper, with a focus on the measurement and prediction of sea transportation of sediment, and detailed physical processes within regional sediment circulation patterns.
Abstract: The movement of mud, sand and gravel on the continental shelf, in the nearshore zone, on beaches and in estuaries can be significant in economic and environmental terms. From ease of navigation, to liability to flooding, from sewage and waste disposal to fish populations changes in the deposition and erosion of sedimentary material can have an effect on man's activities in the shoreline zone. Coastal and Estuarine Sediment Dynamics discusses such movements using the different viewpoints of the marine geologists, the oceanographer and the engineer, and integrates them into an essentially multidisciplinary treatment. Quantified descriptions of the physical processes causing sedimentary movement and response are emphasised in the context of natural systems. Among the features included in this book are: Establishment of physical concepts governing sediment movement in the sea with the minimum of mathematics; Essential background material and up-to- date research results; Information on the measurement and prediction of sea transportation of sediment; Detailed physical processes within regional sediment circulation patterns.

981 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...The adopted values of the coefficients a ðOð10 5210 7Þ s m 1Þ and g ðOð10 3210 2Þ s 1Þ are representative for fine sand (see e.g. also Dyer, 1986)....

    [...]

Book
01 Jan 1994
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of space discretization on wave propagation are investigated and a detailed treatment of boundary conditions is given. But the results are limited to three-dimensional shallow-water flows.
Abstract: Preface. 1. Shallow-water flows. 2. Equations. 3. Some properties. 4. Behaviour of solutions. 5. Boundary conditions. 6. Discretization in space. 7. Effect of space discretization on wave propagation. 8. Time integration methods. 9. Effects of time discretization on wave propagation. 10. Numerical treatment of boundary conditions. 11. Three-dimensional shallow-water flow. List of notations. References. Index.

527 citations


"The effect of geometry and bottom f..." refers background in this paper

  • ...The water motion is described by the depthaveraged shallow water equations (see Vreugdenhil, 1994)....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors formulated a fluid flow model with a series of approximate but reasonable assumptions for straight channels with non-cohesive sand and silt banks and showed that the model can be applied to a more general treatment of natural rivers, which would include various complicating factors such as meandering, sediment sorting and seepage.
Abstract: Rivers and canals with perimeters composed of non-cohesive sand and silt have self-formed active beds and banks. They thus provide a most interesting fluid flow problem, for which one must determine the container as well as the flow. If bed load alone occurs across the perimeter of a wide channel, gravity will pull particles down the lateral slope of the banks; bank erosion is accomplished and the channel widens. In order to maintain equilibrium, this export of material from the banks must be countered by an import of sediment from the channel centre.The mechanism postulated for this import is lateral diffusion of suspended sediment, which overloads the flow near the banks and causes deposition. The model is formulated analytically with the aid of a series of approximate but reasonable assumptions. Singular perturbation techniques are used to define the channel geometry and obtain rational regime relations for straight channels. A comparison with data lends credence to the model.It is hoped that a first step has been made towards a more general treatment, which would include various complicating factors that are important features of natural rivers but are not essential to the maintenance of channel width. Among these factors are meandering, sediment sorting and seepage.

288 citations


"The effect of geometry and bottom f..." refers result in this paper

  • ...This seems to be consistent with literature where it is suggested that the transport due to the bed slope terms cannot be neglected (see Parker, 1978; Talmon et al., 1995), even if suspended-load transport dominates....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of a sloping bed on the direction of sediment transport is determined by conducting bed-levelling experiments, and a distinction is made between laboratory conditions and natural rivers.
Abstract: Laboratory experiments have been conducted to provide data for modelling the direction of sediment transport on a transverse sloping alluvial bed. Conditions with prevailing bed-load transport, and conditions in which a significant part of the bed material is transported as suspended-load are studied. The effect of a sloping bed on the direction of sediment transport is determined by conducting bed-levelling experiments. Comparison of the results with data of curved flume experiments and experience gained with numerical computation of the bed topography in natural rivers yields the conclusion that, at least for bed-load transport, a distinction should be made between laboratory conditions and natural rivers. For conditions with suspended sediment transport the transverse slope effect can not be modelled identical as for bed-load transport.

262 citations


"The effect of geometry and bottom f..." refers result in this paper

  • ...This seems to be consistent with literature where it is suggested that the transport due to the bed slope terms cannot be neglected (see Parker, 1978; Talmon et al., 1995), even if suspended-load transport dominates....

    [...]

Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "The effect of geometry and bottom friction on local bed forms in a tidal embayment" ?

In the case that the width is much smaller than the tidal excursion length and non-linear bottom friction is used, there is good qualitative agreement with results from 3D models reported in literature which were applied to the same parameter regime.