Observations of net sediment transport rate and boundary layer of wave-current flows over vortex ripples

被引:4
|
作者
Yuan, Jing [1 ]
机构
[1] Tsinghua Univ, Dept Hydraul Engn, State Key Lab Hydrosci & Engn, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China
关键词
Sediment transport; Vortex ripples; Wave-current interaction; Oscillatory water tunnel; SHEET FLOW; OSCILLATORY FLOWS; PLUS CURRENT; BOTTOM; SAND; GEOMETRY; MODEL; BED; MIGRATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.coastaleng.2023.104288
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
In shallow coastal regions, shoaling waves and current together determine the net sediment transport rate,Q(net), which is critical for understanding coastal morphodynamics. Moderate waves produce vortex ripples on a sandy seabed, which dramatically changes local wave-current interaction. This study aims at improving our understanding of Q(net) and boundary layer flow under collinear wave-current flow over a rippled bed. Two sets of full-scale experiments were conducted using an oscillatory water tunnel, which approximates wave as sinusoidal oscillatory flow. The live-bed tests, in which 2-dimensional sand ripples were produced over a coarse-sand bed, provided measurements of Q(net) and visual observations of flow-sediment interaction Q(net) under the same wave condition changes from against-current to following-current as the co-existing current increases, which agrees with some previous experiments. In the fixed-bed tests, which have fixed concrete model ripples covered by sandpapers, the detailed flow fields were measured using a particle image velocimetry. The results reveal that the current enlarges the spanwise coherent vortex (SCV) under the positive half cycle (wave and current velocities are co-directional), but reduces the SCV in the negative half cycle. Using turbulence intensity as a proxy for sediment concentration, how ripple-averaged sand flux changes with the current condition was discussed. Under a weak current, the two SCVs are slightly changed, and the key flow feature is still the formation-ejection process of SCVs, so an against-current Q(net) is produced due to the phase-lag effect. Under a strong current, the SCV in the positive half cycle is significantly enlarged by the current, and it brings sand to high levels before its ejection, which makes the phase-lag effect less important than the current advection, so Q(net) becomes following-current.
引用
收藏
页数:14
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