Storm surges, driven by Tropical Cyclones (TCs), pose a threat to the coastal areas of the Bay of Bengal (BoB), causing sediment transport and beach erosion. This study introduces a coupled hydrodynamic (TELEMAC-2D) -wave (TOMAWAC) -morphodynamic (GAIA) model to investigate morphodynamic changes during storm surges. The cyclonic wind is crucial for precisely predicting storm surges, wind waves, and morphodynamic bed evolution. Thus, this study introduced a modified parametric wind model to enhance wind field representation near and far from the cyclone center. The simulated storm surges and wind waves were validated against in-situ observations for TC Hudhud (2014) and TC Varadah (2016), and the simulated morphodynamic bed evolution was validated with field-measured data collected for TC Nivar (2020). Further, this study evaluates the performance of different bed load transport formulations for predicting morphodynamic bed evolution during TC Nivar (2020) under storm-induced currents and waves. Results indicate that the Engelund-Hansen model is most effective for currents alone, while the Bijker model excels for combined currents and waves along the open coast of BoB. The results also indicate that the incorporation of the effect of waves along with currents has enhanced the predictive capability of the coupled model framework.
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