Abstract

In sandy sediments, scour and fill is the key process contributed to mine burial. The scour processes surrounding the cylinder mines freely resting on the sandy seabed under the 12-hr combined action of tidal currents and wind-generated waves, especially over typhoon events are numerically simulated using the DRAMBUIE model. The East China Sea is a good case study due to the dominant impact of summer typhoon events on sediment transport and scour. The numerical results show that the scour depth generally increases with time under the combined current and wave stresses exerted on the seabed, while the depth of the scour pit depends on infill once the currents subside. There is a positive relationship between the scour depth and the bottom orbital velocity after experiencing 12-hr wave action including storm waves, while the relation is not linear. The experimental results also display an elevated trend for scour depth with the increase of orbital velocity. The numerical results reveal a surprising phenomenon: the mobility of sand altering with the increasing bed shear stress larger than the certain threshold, which is also manifested as the curves of scour depth with the different grain size might cross each other. For laboratory experiments, the variability of sand mobility does not occur, likely because typhoon storm waves cannot be reproduced in the flume. More numerical tests indicate that the intersection will be triggered by the division of critical Shields parameter. The preliminary analysis suggests that the phenomenon never documented is likely generated from the error of empirical formulae.

Highlights

  • Bottom mines in shallow water are difficult to find when they are partially or wholly buried

  • Scour Processes Surrounding the Cylinder Mine The tidal current is assumed as semi-diurnal tide with the fluctuations on the order of 0.4 m/s, which typically occurs in the East China Sea (Wang and Ye, 2007) [9]

  • The scour processes surrounding the cylinder mines freely resting on the sandy seabed under the 12-hr combined action of tidal currents and wind-generated waves, especially over typhoon events are numerically simulated using the DRAMBUIE model at 30 m of the East China Sea

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Summary

Introduction

Bottom mines in shallow water are difficult to find when they are partially or wholly buried. Comparing with WISSP (Wave-Induced Spread Sheet Prediction) model, NBURY model (developed in 1980 for German Navy), and Mulhearn model (a model about large migrating bedforms developed by the Australian Defence Science Technology Organization), DRAMBUIE (Defense Research Agency Mine Burial Environment) model can combine tidal current, wave, sediment grain size, water depth and the characteristics of bottom-resting objects better when estimating scour and burial progress, and it is more implemented than Vortex-Lattice model (developed by Jenkins and Inman at Scripps) (Friedrichs, 2001) [2] It has been verified by in-situ experiments (Elmore and Richardson, 2003) [3], and been widely used by many researchers (Testik et al, 2007; Guyonic et al, 2007; Cataño-Lopera et al, 2007) [4]-[6]. This paper will explore the bottom orbital velocity under the action of typhoon events, grain size of seabed sand and their impacts on the scour depth surrounding the cylinder mine in the East China Sea using the DRAMBUIE model

The Theory of DRAMBUIE and Its Implementation
The Scientific Basis of DRAMBUIE Model
Calculating the Total Bed Shear Stress
Implement DRAMBUIE Model with MATLAB
Results and Discussion
Laboratory Experiments on Scour Burial
Variability of Sand Mobility
Conclusions
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