Abstract

Replication of natural mixing through artificial water circulation techniques, such as convectional water circulation systems (CWCS), can break thermal stratification in stagnant water and suppress algal blooms. Here, the field performance of a novel CWCS was evaluated in a eutrophic reservoir (Shingal reservoir, South Korea) for three seasons between September 2016 and September 2018. The CWCS was deployed in a corner of stagnated water in the reservoir. The changes in water temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations at different water depths were examined at the deployment site and two control sites within the stagnant area during the 2016 and 2017 seasons. In 2018, the performance of the CWCS in replicating natural mixing was assessed by monitoring water temperature changes at different depths at the CWCS unit deployment site and a comparison site with natural water flow. The differences in water temperature and DO concentrations between the epilimnion and the hypolimnion were significantly smaller at the deployment site than at the control sites, demonstrating the effectiveness of the CWCS in vertical and horizontal mixing as well as in oxygen transfer. The findings of the field study revealed that the CWCS effectively induced natural-like mixing without disturbing the hypolimnion.

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