Title of article :
Three-dimensional modelling of sediment transport and the effects of dredging in the Haihe Estuary
Author/Authors :
Yuchuan Bai، نويسنده , , Zhaoyin Wang، نويسنده , , Huanting Shen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
The Haihe Tide Lock was constructed on the Haihe River in 1958 to stop salty and muddy water intrusion. Nevertheless, tidal
currents carry sediment, which is eroded from the surrounding silty coast, into the river mouth and, thus siltation of the channel
downstream of the tide lock becomes a major problem. Employed are trailer dredges, which stir up the silt and subsequently moves
it out of the mouth with ebb tidal currents. While the application of this method is encouraging there are still problems to be studied:
how high is the dredging efficiency, how far can the resuspended sediment be transported by the ebb currents, and is the sediment
carried back by the next flood tide? This paper develops a 3-D model to answer these questions. The model employs a special
element-interpolating-function with the r-coordinate system, triangle elements in the horizontal directions and the up-wind finite
element-lumping-coefficient matrix. The results illustrate that the efficiency of dredging is high. Sediment concentration is 4–20 times
higher than the flow without dredging. About 40–60% of the resuspended sediment by the dredges is transported towards the sea
3.2km off the river mouth and 10–30% is transported 5 km away from the mouth. Calculations also indicate that the rate of siltation
of the river mouth is about 0.6Mm3 per year. If the average discharge of the river runoff is 0, 200 or 400m3 s 1 the mouth has to be
dredged for 190, 99 or 75 days every year so to maintain it in equilibrium. The dredging efficiency per day is 0.53–1.31%.
2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
3D-model , Trailer dredging , r-Coordinate system , Haihe River mouth , sediment transport
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science