An experimental investigation of hyperpycnal flow
Abstract
The understanding of river-borne sediment dispersal in the coastal environment is an important problem in coastal/estuarine research. While it remains difficult to quantify how river discharges sediment into the coastal environment, it has been found that there are many qualitative similarities among rivers around the world. Amid these similarities is the formation of freshwater sediment-laden plumes, positively and negatively buoyant, that extend from river mouths into the ocean. Research has been conducted to help understand how sediment is deposited from these plumes for different idealized coastal settings. A series of laboratory experiments were performed to study sediment-laden freshwater plumes within a saltwater tank. Both hyperpycnal and hypopycnal plumes were created by pumping sediment-laden freshwater with a given sediment concentration into a saltwater tank with a constant salinity of 12.5 ppt. Salinity was measured prior to each experiment with the Mannix TDS503 Pocket TDS Meter. Kaolin clay with a primary particle size of D50 = 0.2 μm was used. Freshwater and sediment were mixed in a 50 gallon barrel with fluorescent dye, which improves the visual distinction between the slurry and the ambient water. The saltwater tank is a 3 meter long, 0.15 meter wide, and 0.5 meter deep flume with an adjustable slope (four different slopes, 50, 30, 20, 10 degrees, were investigated) where the slurry enters. Four different sediment concentrations were used with each slope: 15 g/l, 20 g/l, 25 g/l, and 30 g/l, creating a total of sixteen trials for analysis. A Sony SR11 camcorder was used to capture video of the plumes as they move across the tank. Image analysis was performed using a Matlab code to measure parameters in order to describe the plumes. These include velocity, thickness, liftoff distance, and separation distance. Resultant plumes are found to depend on the initial sediment concentration of the slurry as well as the slope used at the entrance of the tank. . Observations were divided into three regimes: fully buoyant plumes (hypopycnal plume), submerged plumes (hyperpycnal plume) that separated from the slurry discharge, and fully submerged plumes that did not separate. Measured data is used to quantify the lift-off distance as a function of inlet condition and occurrence of divergent plume. For several high concentration trials, the occurrence of convective fingers is observed after plume lift-off. A hyperpycnal plume separtes from the discharge to move along the bottom of the tank, while a hypopycnal plume develops and moves along the surface.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2010
- Bibcode:
- 2010AGUFMOS51B1283B
- Keywords:
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- 1862 HYDROLOGY / Sediment transport;
- 4546 OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL / Nearshore processes;
- 4558 OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL / Sediment transport