Flume measurements of sediment erodibility in Boston Harbor

被引:51
|
作者
Ravens, TM [1 ]
Gschwend, PM
机构
[1] Swiss Fed Inst Env Sci & Technol, EAWAG, Dept Envir Phys, CH-8600 Dubendorf, Switzerland
[2] MIT, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Ralph M Parsons Lab, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING-ASCE | 1999年 / 125卷 / 10期
关键词
D O I
10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9429(1999)125:10(998)
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
To obtain in situ measurements of sediment erodibility in defined bottom shear stress environments, a portable, straight flume was built, tested, and deployed in the held for six experiments at three locations in Quincy Bay of Boston Harbor, Mass. The flume had a 1.0-m-long inlet section, which included a boundary-layer trip and a roughened, plexiglass bottom; this design prevented erosion of the sediment bed in the boundary-layer-development region. Downstream of the inlet section was a 1.2-m-long sediment test section, which had a laboratory-verified, uniform bottom stress. In the absence of algal mats, our flume experiments on sites exhibiting a range of bed properties indicated quite uniform erodibility, with a critical shear stress tau(c) of 0.10 +/- 0.04 Pa and an erosion rare constant M of 3.2 +/- 0.2 x 10(-3) kg m(-2) s(-1) Pa-1 (R-2 = 0.92, N = 17, where N is the total number of erosion rate measurements made in the absence of algal mats). The measured rates were consistent with those of many other in situ studies. We observed markedly reduced erodibility in early October 1995 when the sediment was covered by a benthic diatom mat, and measured erosion rates were lessened by 50-80%. The possibility of depth-dependent sediment erodibility in near surface (top 3 mm) was investigated by calculating a set of depth-dependent erosion parameters. The parameters obtained suggested that both the critical shear stress and the erosion rate constant were depth-sensitive (both doubling by 1 mm into the sediment).
引用
收藏
页码:998 / 1005
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Flume measurements of sediment erodibility in Boston Harbor
    Ravens, Thomas M.
    Gschwend, Philip M.
    Journal of Hydraulic Engineering, 1999, 125 (10): : 998 - 1005
  • [2] Flume test section length and sediment erodibility
    Ravens, Thomas M.
    Sindelar, Michael
    JOURNAL OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING, 2008, 134 (10) : 1503 - 1506
  • [3] Measurement of cohesive sediment erodibility in a laboratory flume
    Westrich, B
    Scharf, R
    Schürlein, V
    ENVIRONMENTAL AND COASTAL HYDRAULICS: PROTECTING THE AQUATIC HABITAT, PROCEEDINGS OF THEME B, VOLS 1 & 2, 1997, 27 : 209 - 214
  • [4] Hydrodynamic forcing and sediment character in Boston Harbor
    Ravens, TM
    Madsen, OS
    Signell, RP
    Adams, EE
    Gschwend, PM
    JOURNAL OF WATERWAY PORT COASTAL AND OCEAN ENGINEERING, 1998, 124 (01) : 40 - 42
  • [5] Boston harbor sediment quality responds to cleanup
    Hunt, Carlton D.
    Dahlen, Deirdre
    Pala, Stacy
    Hall, Maury
    Keay, Ken
    OCEANS 2006, VOLS 1-4, 2006, : 623 - +
  • [6] The impacts of bioturbation by common marsh crabs on sediment erodibility: A laboratory flume investigation
    Farron, S. J.
    Hughes, Z. J.
    FitzGerald, D. M.
    Strom, K. B.
    ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 2020, 238
  • [7] Computational fluid dynamics analysis of flow in a straight flume for sediment erodibility testing
    Ravens, Thomas M.
    Jepsen, Richard A.
    JOURNAL OF WATERWAY PORT COASTAL AND OCEAN ENGINEERING, 2006, 132 (06) : 457 - 461
  • [8] Field and laboratory measurements of sediment erodibility: A comparison
    Schaaff, E
    Grenz, C
    Pinazo, C
    Lansard, B
    JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH, 2006, 55 (01) : 30 - 42
  • [9] Nitrogen losses through sediment denitrification in Boston Harbor and Massachusetts Bay
    Nowicki, BL
    Requintina, E
    VanKeuren, D
    Kelly, JR
    ESTUARIES, 1997, 20 (03): : 626 - 639
  • [10] Nitrogen losses through sediment denitrification in Boston Harbor and Massachusetts Bay
    Barbara L. Nowicki
    John R. Kelly
    Edwin Requintina
    Donna van Keuren
    Estuaries, 1997, 20 : 626 - 639