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Assessment of the performance of numerical modeling in reproducing a replenishment of sediments in a water-worked channel

Authors :
Carmelo Juez
Elena Battisacco
Mário J. Franca
Anton Schleiss
Source :
Advances in Water Resources. 92:10-22
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

The artificial replenishment of sediment is used as a method to re-establish sediment continuity downstream of a dam. However, the impact of this technique on the hydraulics conditions, and resulting bed morphology, is yet to be understood. Several numerical tools have been developed during last years for modeling sediment transport and morphology evolution which can be used for this application. These models range from 1D to 3D approaches: the first being over simplistic for the simulation of such a complex geometry; the latter requires often a prohibitive computational effort. However, 2D models are computationally efficient and in these cases may already provide sufficiently accurate predictions of the morphology evolution caused by the sediment replenishment in a river. Here, the 2D shallow water equations in combination with the Exner equation are solved by means of a weak-coupled strategy. The classical friction approach considered for reproducing the bed channel roughness has been modified to take into account the morphological effect of replenishment which provokes a channel bed fining. Computational outcomes are compared with four sets of experimental data obtained from several replenishment configurations studied in the laboratory. The experiments differ in terms of placement volume and configuration. A set of analysis parameters is proposed for the experimental-numerical comparison, with particular attention to the spreading, covered surface and travel distance of placed replenishment grains. The numerical tool is reliable in reproducing the overall tendency shown by the experimental data. The effect of fining roughness is better reproduced with the approach herein proposed. However, it is also highlighted that the sediment clusters found in the experiment are not well numerically reproduced in the regions of the channel with a limited number of sediment grains.

Details

ISSN :
03091708
Volume :
92
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in Water Resources
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cc6dbf8636a5b65f55a466a2997af868
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.advwatres.2016.03.010