Abstract

This study presents the analysis of the water surface elevation, velocity and suspended sediment concentration measurements obtained at a large wave flume under mobile bed conditions. The wave reproduced erosive and accretive conditions, and included monochromatic, short waves perturbed with a free long wave, bichromatic and random conditions. Each tested condition started from a handmade 1/15 slope and lasted for an approximate time period of 2.4h (6 runs of the selected wave condition), to compare the different beach profile developments and, in particular, the events that control sediment transport in the swash and surf zones. All erosive tested conditions produced a shoreline retreat and a bar at the breaking area whose development in time is directly correlated to the length of the breaking area. On the other hand, not all accretive conditions present a shoreward transport, and random conditions do not seem to alter the initial profile. The processed data show the suspended sediment event control produced by the existence or absence of wave–backwash interactions in the swash zone. The existence of these interactions, and their number within the wave group, will be a key parameter in controlling the sediment stirring, water velocity magnitudes and, therefore, the suspended sediment fluxes in the inner surf and outer swash.

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