Abstract

Abstract. Analogue models or scale experiments of estuaries and short tidal basins are notoriously difficult to create in the laboratory because of the difficulty to obtain currents strong enough to transport sand. Our recently discovered method to drive tidal currents by periodically tilting the entire flume leads to intense sediment transport in both the ebb and flood phase, causing dynamic channel and shoal patterns. However, it remains unclear whether tilting produces periodic flows with characteristic tidal properties that are sufficiently similar to those in nature for the purpose of landscape experiments. Moreover, it is not well understood why the flows driven by periodic sea level fluctuation, as in nature, are not sufficient for morphodynamic experiments. Here we compare for the first time the tidal currents driven by sea level fluctuations and by tilting. Experiments were run in a 20 × 3 m straight flume, the Metronome, for a range of tilting periods and with one or two boundaries open at constant head with free inflow and outflow. Also, experiments were run with flow driven by periodic sea level fluctuations. We recorded surface flow velocity along the flume with particle imaging velocimetry and measured water levels along the flume. We compared the results to a one-dimensional model with shallow flow equations for a rough bed, which was tested on the experiments and applied to a range of length scales bridging small experiments and large estuaries. We found that the Reynolds method results in negligible flows along the flume except for the first few metres, whereas flume tilting results in nearly uniform reversing flow velocities along the entire flume that are strong enough to move sand. Furthermore, tidal excursion length relative to basin length and the dominance of friction over inertia is similar in tidal experiments and reality. The sediment mobility converges between the Reynolds method and tilting for flumes hundreds of metres long, which is impractical. Smaller flumes of a few metres in length, on the other hand, are much more dominated by friction than natural systems, meaning that sediment suspension would be impossible in the resulting laminar flow on tidal flats. Where the Reynolds method is limited by small sediment mobility and high tidal range relative to water depth, the tilting method allows for independent control over the variables flow depth, velocity, sediment mobility, tidal period and excursion length, and tidal asymmetry. A periodically tilting flume thus opens up the possibility of systematic biogeomorphological experimentation with self-formed estuaries.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Problem definitionEstuaries are tidal basins with some freshwater inflow that are long relative to their inlet width

  • These shoals hinder shipping and at the same time may be important habitats. Gaining understanding of their behaviour is challenging because modelling sediment transport processes in three-dimensional reversing flow remains overly sensitive to sediment transport parameters, and field observations of morphological development spanning decades to centuries are unavailable (Wang et al, 2002; Swinkels et al, 2009)

  • High velocities occur nearly simultaneously along the flume as expected because it is driven by the gradient of the entire flume rather than the gradient caused by a tidal wave initiated at the seaward boundary

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Problem definitionEstuaries are tidal basins with some freshwater inflow that are long relative to their inlet width. Estuaries have embayed or seaward widening planforms with coastal inlets and are partly filled with intricate patterns of shoals, tidal sand bars, mudflats and tidal marshes. The large-scale planform shape and bar-channel patterns within evolved through biogeomorphological processes and are partly determined by inherited initial conditions and changing boundary conditions (Townend, 2012; de Haas et al, 2018). Certain phenomena are unique to estuaries, such as mutually evasive ebb- or flood-dominated channels separated by shoals (van Veen, 1950; Leuven et al, 2016). These shoals hinder shipping and at the same time may be important habitats. The third complementary method for research is controlled laboratory experiments (Paola et al, 2009; Stefanon et al, 2010; Kleinhans et al, 2010, 2015a), which are rare for estuarine phenomena in contrast to the large number of river experiments

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