Bed morphodynamics at the intake of a side channel controlled by sill geometry
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Bed morphodynamics at the intake of a side channel controlled by sill geometry T.V. de Ruijsscher, A.J.F. Hoitink, S. Naqshband, A.J. Paarlberg PII: DOI: Reference:
S0309-1708(19)30145-9 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.advwatres.2019.103452 ADWR 103452
To appear in:
Advances in Water Resources
Received date: Revised date: Accepted date:
13 February 2019 22 October 2019 26 October 2019
Please cite this article as: T.V. de Ruijsscher, A.J.F. Hoitink, S. Naqshband, A.J. Paarlberg, Bed morphodynamics at the intake of a side channel controlled by sill geometry, Advances in Water Resources (2019), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.advwatres.2019.103452
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Highlights • Two bar features characterise the side channel intake at a longitudinal training dam
• Water and sediment import can be steered by the upstream sill geometry • The flow cross-sectional area over the sill determines the discharge division • The degree of sedimentation and erosion largely depends on the sill geometry • Most dynamic bed in the side channel emerges for a downstream decreasing sill height
1
2
Bed morphodynamics at the intake of a side channel controlled by sill geometry T.V. de Ruijsschera,∗, A.J.F. Hoitinka , S. Naqshbanda , A.J. Paarlbergb a Hydrology
and Quantitative Water Management Group, Department of Environmental Sciences, Wageningen University, PO Box 47, 6700 AA, Wageningen, The Netherlands b HKV Consultants, PO Box 2120, 8203 AC, Lelystad, The Netherlands
Abstract As part of a general trend towards river management solutions that provide more room for the river, longitudinal training dams (LTDs) have recently been constructed in the inner bend of the Dutch Waal River, replacing groynes. LTDs split the river in a main channel and a bank-connected side channel with a sill at the entrance. In the present study, a physical scale model with mobile bed was used to study morphological patterns and discharge division in the entrance region of such a side channel. Alternative geometric designs of the sill are tested to investigate the controls on the diversion of water and sediment into the side channel. After reaching a morphodynamic equilibrium, two bar features were observed in the side channel under low flow conditions. An inner-bend depositional bar emerged against the LTD, resembling depositional bars observed in sharp river bends. A second bar occurred in the most upstream part of the side channel, next to the sill, induced by divergence of the flow by widening of the channel and an increasing flow depth after the sill, hence defined as a divergence bar. The morphologically most active system in the side channel emerges for the configuration in which the sill height decreases in downstream direction. For such a geometry, the sediment that settles during low flow is largely eroded during high flow, reducing maintenance needs. A qualitative comparison based on a lab experiment mimicking field conditions demonstrates the realism of the experiments. Keywords: longitudinal training dam, river morphology, side channel, bifurcation, physical scale model
∗ Corresponding
author Email addresses:
[email protected] (T.V. de Ruijsscher),
[email protected] (A.J.F. Hoitink)
Preprint submitted to Elsevier
October 28, 2019
1
1. Introduction
2
Traditionally, groynes have been widely used to fix the planform geometry of low-
3
land rivers, with the aim to keep the river navigable, and to prevent ice jams (Przed-
4
wojski, 1995; Verheij et al., 2004; Yossef and de Vriend, 2011). Groynes are known
5
to have various side effects however, among which erosion pits at groyne tips and a
6
reduced ecological value in the riparian zone due to shipping waves (ten Brinke et al.,
7
1999; Collas et al., 2018) are the most severe. To improve the ecosystem services of
8
the river system, rivers are allowed more space within restricted boundaries (e.g. Rijke
9
et al., 2012; van Vuren et al., 2015), which has a proven positive effect on ecology
10
(van den Brink et al., 1993; Palmer et al., 2005) and mitigates climate change effects
11
(Giosan et al., 2014; Constantinescu et al., 2015).
12
Longitudinal training dams (LTDs) have been designed as a compromise between
13
purely nature-based solutions that favour ecological quality, and hard engineering struc-
14
tures that ensure navigability. They serve as a flood protection measure, secure the fair-
15
way depth for shipping and leave enough room for ecological development (Havinga
16
et al., 2009). An LTD is a groyne-like structure parallel to the river axis that splits
17
the river in a main navigation channel and a bank-connected side channel with a sill
18
at the upstream side. Due to its orientation parallel to the river axis, the flow resis-
19
tance is limited. This causes a lowering of the water level during floods, which adds
20
to flood-safety of the hinterland. During low discharges, the flow is mainly restricted
21
to the main channel. This effectively reduces the width of the river, leading to larger
22
water depths in the main channel, which benefits shipping. Finally, LTDs are expected
23
to limit bed degradation and to provide favourable ecological conditions compared to
24
groyne fields (Eerden et al., 2011; Havinga, 2016).
25
Although they have been present for years already in France (the Loire River) and
26
Germany (the Main, Rhine and Elbe Rivers), detailed studies on the hydraulic and mor-
27
phological effects of LTDs are limited. Recently, Collas et al. (2018) showed that LTDs
28
stabilise the flow behind the dam and reduce the influence of ship waves, which creates
29
favourable ecological conditions. The ability of sediment particles to be transported
30
into the side channel likely depends on the sill side slope and the angle at which wa-
31
ter flows over the sill (Jammers, 2017). In the presence of alternate bars in the main
32
channel, the two-channel LTD system is in general morphologically unstable, although
33
a stable configuration might be reached when the upstream end of the LTD is located 2
34
close to the bar top (Le et al., 2018b). In the latter case, cyclic morphological behaviour
35
may emerge, even without external periodic forcing (Le et al., 2018a).
36
The present work builds on prior work of Vermeulen et al. (2014), who—to the
37
authors knowledge—were the first to experimentally study LTDs. They based their
38
physical scale model (scale 1:60) on a future projection of the Waal River in the
39
Netherlands with prototype discharges of 1250 m3 s−1 and 4600 m3 s−1 . The studied
40
river section was a sand-bedded lowland river with particle size distributions charac-
41
terized by D50 = 1.2 mm and D90 = 2.0 mm. In the physical scale model, polystyrene
42
particles were used as a surrogate sediment with D50 = 2.1 mm, D90 = 2.9 mm and
43
ρs = 1055 kg m−3 . Scaling was based on the Shields number, keeping the Froude num-
44
ber close to prototype values. Vermeulen et al. (2014) concluded that local morpholog-
45
ical changes near the intake of an LTD side channel are expected to be limited. They
46
also showed that the sediment mobility is slightly overestimated by using polystyrene,
47
but dune height agrees well with corresponding prototype values, and fairway deepen-
48
ing agrees well with the realised river narrowing by the LTD.
49
In the present study, the physical model of Vermeulen et al. (2014) has been modi-
50
fied to match the design that has been built in the Waal River, in a pilot downstream of
51
the city of Tiel. On this location, LTD side channels replace former groyne fields over
52
a 10 km stretch in the inner bends of the river, where a riprap bank is present instead of
53
upstream groynes. The intake section of the side channel is chosen such that it matches
54
the location where in former times a natural side channel cut into the floodplain (Fig. 1).
55
At about three quarters downstream from the upstream end, a secondary opening with
56
a sill is present in the LTD to enable exchange of water between the two channels, even
57
during low discharges. In contrast to Vermeulen et al. (2014), no upstream groynes
58
are constructed, and the entrance of the side channel is marked by a sill in line with
59
the LTD itself. The latter is also different from the studies by Le et al. (2018a,b), who
60
did not use any regulatory structure at the entrance of the side channel, and used a thin
61
plate to model the LTD.
62
Prior studies also assumed a free inflow side channel, adopting 1-D (Bolla Pittaluga
63
et al., 2003; Kleinhans et al., 2008; Bertoldi et al., 2009; van der Mark and Mosselman,
64
2013), 2-D (Le et al., 2018b) and quasi-3-D (Kleinhans et al., 2008) numerical models
65
to explore bifurcation stability. Those studies elaborated on simple hypothetical rela-
66
tionships for sediment division (Wang et al., 1995). The equilibrium discharge diver-
3
0
500
1000 1500 m
1815
2017
Figure 1: Prototype LTD in the Waal River, downstream of the city of Tiel. Left: situation in 1815, where a natural side channel can be seen, which used to connect to the river during floods where nowadays the entrance of the LTD side channel is located. The arrow denotes the flow direction. Right: present situation of the study area. Source of maps: Kadaster (2018).
67
sion to side channels has been studied as a function of various geometrical parameters
68
by van Denderen et al. (2018). Detailed flow patterns have been analysed as a function
69
of various hydraulic and geometric boundary conditions (Hardy et al., 2011).
70
In the present contribution, we add an upstream control mechanism to the side
71
channel system, in the form of a sill. We aim to unravel how the geometry of this
72
sill affects morphological changes and flow patterns around the side channel intake,
73
which is important for navigability, ecology and dredging efforts. We are in particular
74
interested in 1) the morphological effects of possible flow separation downstream of the
75
side channel intake, 2) the morphological effects of flow divergence at the side channel
76
entrance, and 3) the effect of the sill on the discharge division over the two channels.
77
The experimental set-up is described in section 2, consisting of the physical scale
78
model and the measurement equipment used. Section 3 introduces the applied analysis
79
methods. The results are shown in section 4, addressing morphological changes, flow
80
characteristics and the discharge division. Thereafter, a comparison between lab and
81
field results is provided in section 5, followed by a discussion of the experimental
82
findings in section 6. Finally, conclusions are formulated in section 7.
4
83
2. Experimental set-up
84
2.1. Prototype
85
The LTD pilot in the Dutch Waal River (Eerden et al., 2011; Huthoff et al., 2011)
86
serves as a prototype for this scale model study. The Waal is a sand-bedded, mildly
87
curved lowland river and the main branch of the Rhine River in the Netherlands. Bed
88
morphology is predominantly determined by sediment transported in bedload mode,
89
with typical particle sizes of D50 = 1.2 mm and D90 = 2.0 mm. Flow velocities in the
90
Waal are typically around U = 1 m s−1 . Two characteristic hydraulic conditions were
91
defined, consisting of a mean water depth of d = 4 m (low flow) with a corresponding
92
discharge of Q = 1250 m3 s−1 and a mean water depth of d = 8 m (high flow) with
93
a corresponding discharge of Q = 4600 m3 s−1 . The LTD at the location of interest
94
creates a side channel with a typical width of 90 m on a main channel bankfull width of
95
230 m. The cross-sectional profile of the prototype LTD is a trapezoid with side slopes
96
of 1:2.5, an upper base of 2 m width, and a typical height of 6.5 m.
97
2.2. Physical scale model
98
The study’s experiments took place in a straight horizontal flume with recircula-
99
tion facilities for both water and sediment at the Kraijenhoff van de Leur Laboratory
100
for Water and Sediment Dynamics (Wageningen University & Research, The Nether-
101
lands). The flume measured 0.7 m×2.6 m×12.8 m internally (height × width × length).
102
At the upstream end of the flume, a stacked pile of PVC tubes served as a flow straight-
103
ener to suppress large turbulence generated by the inlet geometry. Inside the flume, we
104
constructed a scale model of an LTD with an upstream riprap bank (Fig. 2), adjusting
105
the model of Vermeulen et al. (2014). A solid base was located between the LTD and
106
the riprap bank, where an adjustable gravel sill could be built upon. The model was
107
geometrically scaled from the prototype with a scaling factor of nL = 60 in all dimen-
108
sions. The model represented a width of 156 m and a length of 720 m in the prototype.
109
A sediment layer of 20 cm thick completely covered the solid base of the flume, only
110
leaving the LTD (9.2 cm in height), the riprap bank and the sill uncovered. By recircu-
111
lating the sediment in the flume, the total volume of sediment in the system remained
112
constant throughout the experiment.
113
Four alternative sill geometries at the LTD side channel intake were studied (Fig. 3):
114
A) a uniform, low sill height, B) a downstream increasing sill height, C) a downstream 5
Figure 2: Scale model of the entrance region of the prototype LTD, looking upstream. The main flow direction is indicated by the arrow. From top to bottom, a riprap bank, the sill at the side channel entrance, and the LTD are visible. The sill is bounded by x-coordinates S u and S d .
115
decreasing sill height, and D) a uniform, elevated sill height. We chose these geome-
116
tries to investigate the effect of differences in total cross-sectional flow areas, through
117
comparison of alternatives A and D, and lateral differences in cross-sectional flow area,
118
through comparison of alternatives B and C. The side slope of the sill was kept con-
119
stant at 1:2.5 as is the case in the prototype in the Waal River, although the side slope
120
plays a significant role in sediment transport over the sill (Jammers, 2017). Each of
121
these geometries was studied under two hydraulic conditions that were scaled from the
122
earlier-mentioned low flow and high flow prototype conditions. For each of the sill ge-
123
ometries, measurements were carried out after reaching a morphodynamic equilibrium,
124
defined here as a dynamic equilibrium in which dune length in the main channel con-
125
verged to a constant value of typically 70 cm. Each high flow experiment was carried
126
out directly after the corresponding low flow experiment, again allowing the system to
127
reach a morphodynamic equilibrium.
128
To achieve dynamic similarity of both hydraulic characteristics and sediment trans-
129
port in the physical scale model, we used lightweight surrogate sediment particles
130
(polystyrene) with a density of ρs = 1055 kg m−3 and typical sizes of D50 = 2.1 mm and
131
D90 = 2.9 mm. Table 1 lists typical values for the hydraulic conditions and sediment
132
characteristics. For details on the underlying scaling method, we refer to Vermeulen
6
A2/B2
height LTD crest
A1/B1
main flow direction
7.5 cm sill
2.5 cm
polystyrene A
2.5 cm
z B
x C2/D2 C1/D1
7.5 cm
7.5 cm 2.5 cm
C Sd
Su
D Sd
Su
Figure 3: Schematic side view representation of the sill geometries and water levels used during the subsequent experiments along line segment S u S d (Fig. 2). The sill is shown in grey, and the water column in blue (low/high water level). The LTD crest height is indicated by the dashed line as a reference.
133
et al. (2014), who extensively discussed the method and the different non-dimensional
134
numbers.
135
2.3. Measurement equipment
136
To measure flow velocities, we used a Vectrino Profiler, which is a profiling acous-
137
tic velocimeter (Nortek AS, 2013). This device captures both magnitude and direction
138
of the velocity in vertical bins of 1 mm over a vertical range of 3 cm and at a frequency
139
of 50 Hz. The lower end of the vertical range coincided with the initial bed level height
140
(z = 20 cm), except on top of the sill (z = 25 cm). Additionally, a point measurement
141
of the bed level directly underneath the instrument is retrieved. We chose the measure-
142
ment period such that approximately one dune had migrated to minimise the effect of
143
bed mobility on the results. The probe of the profiler did not disturb the bed signifi-
144
cantly, as the probe was located well above the bed. With the gathered velocity data,
145
we investigated flow patterns around the intake of the LTD side channel and estimated
146
the discharge division over the two channels. For the latter, the water level was also
147
continuously monitored at eight points along the side walls of the flume. For this pur-
148
pose, eight wall-bound tubes were coupled to stilling wells outside the flume, with each
7
Table 1: Typical hydraulic conditions for low and high flow experiments: discharge Q, water depth d, characteristic flow velocity U, Froude number Fr, Reynolds number Re and Shields number θ. All values are averaged over the interval x ∈ [2000; 4000] mm in experiments B1 and B2, but are representative for the upstream conditions in all experiments. The lower part of the table shows characteristics of the polystyrene granulate: median (D50 ) and 90th percentile (D90 ) particle size, and sediment density ρs .
Q (m3 s−1 ) d (m) U (m s−1 )
low flow
high flow
2.04 × 10−2
3.55 × 10−2
0.14
0.15
9.68 × 10−2
1.46 × 10−1
Fr (−)
0.15
0.12
Re (−)
1.3 × 104
2.0 × 104
θ (−) D50 (m) D90 (m) ρs (kg m−3 )
0.25
0.29
2.1 × 10−3 2.9 × 10−3
1.055 × 103
149
stilling well containing a magnetostrictive linear position sensor. The total discharge
150
was also continuously monitored using an electromagnetic flow meter. Fig. 4 gives an
151
overview of the locations of velocity and water level measurements.
152
In addition to flow velocities and discharge, we monitored bed topography during
153
subsequent phases of the experiment using a line laser scanner. The use of a line laser
154
scanner for bed level monitoring is a measurement method in which the bed elevation
155
is detected from the reflection of light projected on the bed making use of a line laser
156
and a 3-D camera, allowing the bed level to be measured without disturbing the flow
157
(de Ruijsscher et al., 2018). The bed was scanned with an along-flow resolution of
158
2 mm and an average cross-flow resolution of approximately 3 mm, in eight parallel
159
partly-overlapping swipes. In this way, the initial dry-bed topography was determined,
160
as well as the initial bed topography under still water and the final bed topography.
161
Because we are only interested in the final bed topography, the flow was stopped before
162
measuring. This has the benefit of reducing the measurement error due to perturbations
163
at the free surface.
8
Figure 4: Locations of water level and velocity measurements shown on a greyscale background of the initial bed topography in experiment A1. Water level measurement locations are indicated by black crosses. Velocity measurement locations are indicated by blue circles (low water experiments, A1–D1), red pluses (high water experiments, A2–D2) and a purple triangle (only C2 and D2). These velocity measurements took 40 minutes per location, and were only conducted after a morphodynamic equilibrium was reached. Velocity measurements used for discharge estimation are indicated by green dots. These velocity measurements took 3 minutes per location.
164
3. Analysis methods
165
3.1. Bed level change
166
To determine bed level changes from the measured bed level values, the bed level
167
was interpolated to a regular grid by means of a LOESS algorithm (Vermeulen, 2016;
168
de Ruijsscher et al., 2018). Now the bed level change ∆zb per horizontal cell was
169
obtained according to
170
∆zb (x, y) = zb,final (x, y) − zb,0 (x, y) ,
171
with zb,0 the initial bed level. From this, the cumulative sedimentation for the side
172
channel was calculated by summing over all bed level cells in the side channel. This
173
results in ∆Vside =
174
X
∆zb (x, y)∆x∆y ,
(1)
(2)
x≥4000 mm y≤950 mm 175
with ∆x and ∆y the horizontal grid cell dimensions.
176
3.2. Flow velocities
177
3.2.1. Depth-averaged velocities
178
To analyse the measured flow velocities from the profiling velocimeter, spikes were
179
detected and removed using a bivariate Kernel distribution. This method has been
180
extensively described by Islam and Zhu (2013), based on earlier work of Duong and
181
Hazelton (2003) and Botev et al. (2010). Moreover, only data points with a correlation 9
182
of more than 70% for all four transducers are maintained (Lane et al., 1998) and spatial
183
cells with more than 50% missing values are omitted in further analysis. The remaining
184
velocity data after applying the above steps was interpolated using a cubic Hermite
185
spline. For each velocity measurement point, the time series was averaged over the 40
186
minute bursts, to average out turbulent fluctuations following u=
187
188
189
190
T 1X u, T t=1
(3)
with u the velocity component along the x-axis. A depth-averaged velocity was obtained by integrating the previous result over a vertical range [z1 ; z2 ] according to Z z2 1 u dz . (4) hui = z2 − z1 z1
191
Similar equations hold for the v and w components along y- and z-axis, respectively.
192
3.2.2. Flow angle
193
194
The inflow of water into the side channel was studied in more detail using the angle of the flow with the x-axis, calculated as v θ = arctan − . u
195
(5)
196
The minus sign was needed to let θ > 0 indicate flow into the side channel. For high
197
water level experiments A2–D2, θ was calculated on top of the sill (y = 888 mm). For
198
low water level experiments A1–D1, this was not possible, due to limited water depth,
199
and θ was measured in the main channel (y = 1488 mm).
200
Only velocity data points for which the normalised standard deviation of veloc-
201
ity component v did not exceed an empirically determined critical value of 0.7 were
202
taken into account, to avoid misinterpretation of θ-values due to negligible near-bed
203
velocities. This normalised standard deviation criterion was defined as σv < 0.7 . ~u
204
205
3.2.3. Discharge estimation
(6)
206
An estimation of the discharge in both main and side channel was obtained by
207
depth-integrating velocity component u measured over a spanwise line and multiplying
208
209
with the grid cell size ∆y as N "Z z2 X # 1 1 ˆ ˆ Q= u dz + (z1 − z0 ) u(z1 ) + (zWL − z2 ) u (z2 ) + u (zWL ) ∆y , 2 2 {z } | {z }n n=1 |z1{z } | I
II
III
10
(7)
210
with n the total number of grid cells in the spanwise direction. Term I is the integration
211
of time-averaged velocity u over the measured vertical range [z1 ; z2 ], term II is the
212
integration of linearly interpolated velocities between the lowest measured value u(z1 )
213
and u(z0 ) = 0 at the bed, and term III is the integration of the linearly extrapolated
214
velocity profile towards the water surface zWL , using the upper seven vertical cells.
215
216
To relate the discharge division to the cross-sectional area over the sill, this crosssectional area was defined as A = A0 −
217
218
Z
x2
(zsill (x) − z0 ) dx ,
x1
(8)
with reference cross-section A0 defined as A0 = (zLTD − z0 ) (x2 − x1 ) ,
219
220
where [x1 ; x2 ] = [4000; 7950] mm, and zLTD is the height of the LTD crest.
221
3.3. Flow contraction
(9)
222
An often used method to define flow contraction is based on the quotient µ of the
223
flow cross-sectional areas at the location of maximum contraction and downstream of
224
the contraction (Idel’chik, 1966; Hamill, 2001). Because the water level was only mea-
225
sured at a limited number of points, this is not feasible in the present study. Therefore,
226
an estimator was defined that depends both on the angle of the flow in the side channel
227
just downstream of the LTD head and on the relative height of the bed level close to the
228
LTD in the side channel:
229
! z590 − z0 2α , × µˆ = max π h − z0
(10)
230
where α = arccos
231
tor and the x-axis, z590 is the mean bed level at y = 590 mm, and h is the mean water
232
level in the main channel. The maximum of α was taken over the measured flow ve-
233
locity measurement locations within x ∈ [7985; 8985] mm and α was chosen such that
hui/|h~ui|
denotes the angle between the depth averaged velocity vec-
234
α ∈ [−π; π].
235
4. Results
236
4.1. Morphological changes in the side channel
237
Sedimentation and erosion patterns in the side channel of the LTD configuration
238
showed large differences between the high water level regime and the low water level 11
239
regime (filled contours in Fig. 5). In addition, significant differences are observed
240
in patterns between alternative sill geometries. In the following, we focus consecu-
241
tively on persistent morphological features including a depositional bar that developed
242
downstream of the LTD head (‘inner-bend depositional bar’), on a depositional bar in
243
the most upstream part of the side channel (‘divergence bar’), and on the cumulative
244
sedimentation for the entire side channel. A schematic overview of these phenomena
245
is provided afterwards, in section 6 (Fig. 11).
246
4.1.1. Inner-bend depositional bar
247
In the low flow experiments (Fig. 5), a depositional bar developed against the slope
248
of the LTD. The location and intensity of this region of sedimentation depends on the
249
geometrical characteristics of the sill. In situations A1 (low uniform sill height) and
250
C1 (downstream decreasing sill height) the general form of the bar showed to be iden-
251
tical, although the sedimentation was more intense in case C1. For B1 (downstream
252
increasing sill height), the bar started approximately 1 m more upstream with the re-
253
gion of sedimentation extending over the width of the side channel. No sedimentation
254
occurred in case D1, because the height of the sill was only just below the water level.
255
For cases A1–C1, the water flowed obliquely into the side channel, creating a channel
256
that curved around the above-mentioned inner-bend depositional bar. Because of this,
257
a region of erosion was created against the flume wall. The longitudinal location of this
258
erosion depends on the angle of inflow, and therefore on the sill geometry.
259
During the high flow experiments, most of the deposited sediment was eroded
260
again, and the inner-bend depositional bar disappeared. Still, a small region of sed-
261
imentation occurred against the LTD slope, but the differences between experiments
262
with alternative sill geometries were less pronounced. Although the flow still curves
263
into the side channel, flow velocities close to the LTD in the side channel were now
264
non-negligible, and quasi-parallel to the LTD and the main channel flow (Fig. 5, A2–
265
D2).
266
4.1.2. Divergence bar
267
In the most upstream part of the side channel, next to the sill, a region of sedi-
268
mentation occurred driven by flow divergence. Hence we adopt the term divergence
269
bar for this morphological feature. In the evolution towards a dynamic equilibrium,
270
this bar tilted under an increasing angle with the sill, and shifted slightly upstream (not 12
Figure 5: Sedimentation (orange) and erosion (purple) patterns with respect to the initial flat bed, overlaid on the scale model elevation (gray). Red (blue) arrows indicate depth-averaged velocities over the top (bottom) 1.5 cm of the measured vertical range. Velocities above the sill (y = 888 mm) are measured higher in the water column. The bed level could not be measured in part of the main channel in experiment D2 due to equipment failure.
13
271
shown). During the low flow experimental conditions, there were remarkable differ-
272
ences between runs with alternative sill geometries. First of all, the location of the di-
273
vergence bar was shifted more downstream for C1 (downstream decreasing sill height)
274
compared to A1 and B1. In addition to that—and similar to what was observed for the
275
inner-bend depositional bar—the deposition was spread out over a larger area for B1
276
and was absent for D1 due to the limited discharge into the side channel.
277
During the high flow experiments, the divergence bar hardly changed for A2. For
278
B2 the bar was diminished to its most upstream part, whereas for C2 it completely
279
disappeared. In terms of flow patterns, these differences were reflected in an inflow
280
over the downstream half of the sill for A2, and over the upstream part of the sill for
281
D2, eroding a deep inflow channel in the latter case (Fig. 5, A2 and D2). Geometries
282
B and C can be seen as intermediate stages between these two extreme situations, with
283
geometry C creating the most dynamic system in terms of morphological changes. In
284
the latter experimental set-up, a large inner-bend depositional bar and a divergence bar
285
were observed at low flow, whereas these were both almost completely eroded during
286
high flow. Moreover, the main inflow channel was shifted from close to the LTD head
287
to a more sill-parallel inflow over the upstream part of the sill.
288
4.1.3. Cumulative sedimentation
289
To quantify the net sediment import between the starting situation with flat bed
290
and the situation in morphodynamic equilibrium, the cumulative sedimentation in the
291
side channel is visualized in Fig. 6. Hardly any difference was observed in cumulative
292
sedimentation between experiments B and C, with a large sedimentation volume in
293
the side channel during low flow, and a net erosive effect at the end of a high water
294
period. For A (low uniform sill height, i.e. large cross-sectional area over the sill) there
295
was always net sedimentation with respect to the initial flat bed. For D (high uniform
296
sill height, i.e. small cross-sectional area over the sill) net erosion occurred under all
297
circumstances, although at low enough water levels, the flow through the side channel
298
is weak, and erosion is negligible.
299
The most dynamic system in terms of sedimentation and erosion occurred for in-
300
termediate flow cross-sectional areas over the sill, i.e. sill geometries B and C. This is
301
likely due to the divergence bar being situated next to the downstream half of the sill
302
(Fig. 5), which renders the bar more prone to erosion during high flow.
14
0.15
0:171
0:143
0:050
0
0:088
"Vside (m3 )
0.1 0.05
-0.05 -0.1
D D1 2
C 1 C 2
B 1 B 2
A A1 2
-0.15
experiment Figure 6: Cumulative sedimentation in the side channel for each experiment, with respect to the initial flat bed. For each sill geometry, the difference in sedimentation between the high and low water situations is indicated.
303
4.2. Flow patterns
304
4.2.1. Flow contraction
305
Both an inner-bend depositional bar and a flow separation zone can give rise to flow
306
contraction at the entrance of the side channel just downstream of the LTD head. To
307
quantify this effect, Equation (10) was used to calculate a flow contraction metric µ, ˆ
308
which peaks in experiments A1 and C1 (Fig. 7). This implies that during low water
309
levels, the flow is contracted downstream of the sill with geometries A1 and C1. High
310
flow experiments A2–C2 did not convincingly show this phenomenon, although it is
311
hard to draw conclusions on flow separation when no measurements are available in-
312
side the separation zone. For experiments B1 and D1, no reliable value of µˆ could be
313
determined, due to weak flow. For a high enough sill with uniform height, like e.g. in
314
situation D2, the morphological patterns suggest flow contraction in the side channel
315
(lower graph Fig. 5). However, this could not be confirmed based on µ, ˆ because it hap-
316
pened more downstream, outside the region where flow velocity measurements were
317
taken.
318
4.2.2. Inflow angle
319
As observed in Fig. 5, the angle of the flow into the side channel varied, depending
320
on both sill geometry and water level. To take a more detailed look at this, the inflow
321
angle θ as defined in Equation (5) is shown in Fig. 8 in (x, z)-space. For the low flow
322
regime (A1–D1), the inflow angle varied with the x-coordinate. In experiments A1
323
and B1, representing a low uniform sill height and a downstream increasing sill height,
324
respectively, the inflow angle higher up in the water column was of equal magnitude 15
0.15
^ 7
0.1 0.05 0
1
2
1
2 D
D
C
2
C
2
1
B
B
A
A
1
-0.05
experiment Figure 7: Flow contraction metric µˆ showing that flow separation is apparent in the low flow experiments A1 and C1, both with a low sill height downstream. For the high flow experiments, no flow separation in the horizontal plane was observed.
325
over the entire length of the sill. In experiment C1, where the sill height decreases
326
downstream, the flow angle increased in the downstream direction. This indicates that
327
the flow primarily entered the side channel over the downstream half of the sill, which
328
is reflected by the sedimentation patterns in Fig. 5. The fourth plot, representing exper-
329
iment D1, shows flow angles close to zero, caused by the side channel entrance being
330
almost completely blocked by the sill.
331
For high flow conditions—when flow exchange occurs over the entire length of
332
the LTD—the inflow angle was of equal magnitude along the entire sill (bottom three
333
plots of Fig. 8: A2–C2). Moreover, there were hardly any differences between the
334
alternative sill geometries, except for the depth ranges. Although the inflow angle was
335
mostly constant over depth, it increased with depth at the most upstream part of the sill.
336
4.3. Discharge division
337
The cross-sectional area over the sill was not equal for the experiments, which
338
influenced the fraction of the total discharge flowing into the side channel (Fig. 9).
339
This is relevant, because the water discharge division over the two channels controls the
340
morphological evolution in both main and side channel. For the low flow experiments,
341
the fraction of the discharge into the side channel increased with the cross-sectional
342
area, as expected, with river narrowing for low water levels and river widening for high
343
water levels. The side channel discharge fraction agrees reasonably well with values
344
observed in the field (J. Sieben, pers. comm., 2018) and in a numerical study by Huthoff
345
et al. (2011), although a slight underestimation is observed. There was no significant
346
difference between cases B1 and C1, which suggests that apart from the cross-sectional 16
Figure 8: Flow angle θ with respect to the main flow direction in (x, z)-space, based on Equation (5), with the scale indicated by the horizontal bars with length 0.02π (A1–D1) and 0.06π (A2–C2). A positive (negative) value indicates flow towards (away from) the side channel. S u and S d mark the upstream and downstream boundaries of the sill, respectively (Fig. 2). During low flow, the streamwise location x of maximum specific discharge into the side channel is determined by the sill geometry. For a downstream decreasing sill height (C1), flow enters more downstream. During high flow, the angle was of equal magnitude along the entire sill and hardly varied with depth.
17
^ main ) ^ side + Q ^ side =(Q Q
0.4 0.3 D2
C2
B2
A2 A1
0.2 C1
0.1 0 0.3
B1
D1 0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
A=A0 Figure 9: Discharge through the side channel increases with increasing cross-sectional area over the sill during the low flow phase. This proceeds from the discharge division Qˆ side /(Qˆ side + Qˆ main ) as a function of relative cross-sectional area over the sill A/A0 in experiments A1–D1. During the high flow phase (experiments A2–D2), no significant differences are observed, due to flow exchange over the LTD crest. Bars indicate the error based on the measured total discharge. The dashed line denotes the division between increased fairway depth (river narrowing) and increased discharge capacity (river widening) (following J. Sieben, pers. comm., 2018).
347
area, the geometry of the sill did not influence the discharge division. In the high flow
348
experiments, there was no significant difference between the discharge division over
349
the two channels, related to flow exchange over the LTD crest.
350
5. Comparison with field pilot
351
To establish the realism of the experiments, a qualitative comparison was performed
352
between the final bed level of experiment A1 and bed level data from multi-beam
353
echo-soundings (MBES) in the field pilot. The sill at the side channel intake has a
354
uniform low height in the field, similar to the situation in experiment A1. The MBES-
355
measurements were performed on 7 February 2017, which is more than 15 months after
356
completion of the LTD pilot configuration. The total river discharge at Tiel (5 km up-
357
stream) was Q = 1448 m3 s−1 , whereas minimum, mean and maximum discharge over
358
2017 were Qmin = 543 m3 s−1 , Q = 1379 m3 s−1 and Qmax = 5088 m3 s−1 , respectively.
359
The crest of the LTD was above the water surface during the field measurements. At
360
the side channel bank, however, remainders of old groynes are present, which is differ-
361
ent from the vertical flume wall in the scale model. The presence of groyne remainders
362
is reflected by the wavy pattern of the shoreline. The river is mildly curved at the LTD
363
section, with the inflection point near the entrance of the side channel under study.
364
The qualitative comparison between the field pilot and experiment A1 shows that 18
270 mm
120 mm
Figure 10: Qualitative comparison of bed levels from lab and field measurements: both show the inner-bend depositional bar and the divergence bar in the side channel, although location and intensity differ. Left: bed level from multi-beam echo-soundings in the Waal River field pilot on 7 February 2017, with respect to Amsterdam Ordnance Datum (NAP). Right: bed level at the end of experiment A1, with respect to the flume bottom. The main flow direction is indicated by the arrow. Source of background image: Google.
19
365
the main morphological features are well reproduced (Fig. 10), but differences exist.
366
The erosion pit at the side channel flume wall is not observed in the field pilot. This may
367
indicate that the erosion pit is merely a flume wall effect, which does not occur in the
368
field pilot due to the mild slope of the bank. A second explanation lies in the presence
369
of old groyne remainders, which stabilise the bank. Another discrepancy between lab
370
experiments and field pilot regards the divergence bar in the most upstream part of
371
the field pilot side channel, which is less pronounced and located more downstream
372
than observed in the scale model. In the field pilot, less sediment is deposited against
373
the side channel slope of the LTD. The more pronounced sedimentation and erosion
374
patterns in the scale model side channel may be explained by the slightly exaggerated
375
mobility of polystyrene particles in the scale model (Vermeulen et al., 2014).
376
6. Discussion
III II
I
sedimentation erosion sill flow direction
Figure 11: Schematic overview of the bed morphology at the bifurcation, highlighting (I) the inner-bend depositional bar caused by flow separation, (II) the divergence bar, induced by widening of the river at the side channel entrance and an increasing flow depth just behind the LTD sill, and (III) an erosion pit along the side channel bank, which might result from the solid flume wall.
377
6.1. Inner-bend depositional bar
378
Fig. 11 offers a schematic overview of the bed morphology in the inlet region.
379
For low discharges, flow contraction due to the inner bend depositional bar occurs
380
especially in cases with a low sill height near the LTD (i.e., A1 and C1, Figs. 5 and 7).
381
This resembles flow separation in the inner bend of rivers as described by Blanckaert 20
Figure 12: From top to bottom, the slope of the sill to LTD transition becomes milder, which causes a change in direction of the inflow angle (black line), while retaining the inner-bend depositional bar. Filled contours indicate sedimentation (orange) and erosion (purple) patterns. The elevation of the scale model is indicated in gray: the darker the higher. Red (blue) arrows indicate depth-averaged velocities over the top (bottom) 1.5 cm of the measured vertical range.
382
et al. (2012), who observed a flow separation cell downstream of the bend apex. To
383
better grasp the flow separation and subsequent inner-bend depositional bar formation,
384
an additional experiment AB1 was performed, designed as a combination of A1 and
385
B1. It consists of a horizontal sill as in experiment A1, but with an increasing sill height
386
from 2.5 to 7.5 cm over the downstream 25 % of the sill. In other words, the slope of
387
the transition from the lowest part of the sill to the LTD crest is 1:2.5, 1:10 and 1:40
388
for A1, AB1 and B1, respectively.
389
Analogous to Fig. 5, the bed level differences of experiments A1, AB1 and B1 are
390
shown in Fig. 12. While the inner-bend depositional bar is present in all cases shown,
391
the inflow angle is different, impacting on the pattern of sedimentation and erosion
392
downstream. This inflow angle, denoted by the black line in Fig. 12, is a measure of
393
flow separation at the bifurcation point. Flow separation intensifies with decreasing
394
steepness of the transition from the sill to the LTD crest (from A, via AB, to B). To
395
limit the amount of sedimentation in the side channel downstream of the bifurcation
396
point, a steep transition is desirable between the sill and the LTD, as in configurations
397
A and C.
21
398
6.2. Divergence bar
399
At the most upstream part of the side channel, a bar is formed caused by the flow
400
diverting into the side channel and over the sill (Fig. 11, location II). One could ar-
401
gue that the formation of this bar is analogous to the formation of an inner-bend bar
402
in case of flow bifurcation, for instance at a side channel take-off. Kleinhans et al.
403
(2013) and van Denderen et al. (2018) describe this phenomenon as development of a
404
bar and scour zone, possibly associated with a flow separation zone as described pre-
405
viously by Neary and Odgaard (1993) for a 90◦ channel offtake. Although no direct
406
velocity measurements are performed in the triangle enclosed by the divergence bar,
407
the flume wall and the rip-rap bank (Fig. 5), the absence of morphological activity in
408
this most upstream part of the side channel reflects the absence of a strong horizontal
409
recirculation. A similar configuration was studied numerically by van Linge (2017)
410
and Jammers (2017). They did observe a horizontal recirculation zone upstream in the
411
side channel, but found no sediment transport over the sill towards this zone (Jammers,
412
2017). Thus, the formation of the divergence bar is dominated by a divergence-induced
413
reduced flow velocity by 1) widening of the flow at the side channel entrance, and 2)
414
increased water depth after the sill.
415
6.3. Sill design and discharge division
416
Simulations by Le et al. (2018a,b) suggest that for a free inflow LTD system, even-
417
tually one of the two channels will close. This is undesirable, because it makes the
418
side channel unsuitable for recreational boating and results in increased discharge and
419
erosion in the main channel. The sill at the entrance of the LTD side channel shows to
420
be an effective regulatory structure to prevent the side channel from closing. A down-
421
stream decreasing sill height (configuration C) minimises the dredging efforts needed
422
to keep the side channel open in the long term, since much of the sediment deposited
423
during low flow is removed during high flow. The discharge division Qside /Qtot , which
424
is an important driving parameter for morphological evolution in both main and side
425
channel, is well below the critical value of 0.27 in experiments B1–D1 (Fig. 9). This
426
critical value has been established as the threshold between effective narrowing and
427
widening of the river after LTD construction. This value is scaled from the field value
428
of 0.12 obtained from Rijkswaterstaat (J. Sieben, pers. comm., 2018), based on 45% of
429
the normal width of the river being modelled (Boersema, 2012). Because the LTD is
22
430
located in the inner bend of the river with the sill approximately at the inflexion point,
431
the actual discharge distribution Qside /Qtot is underestimated in the scale model, which
432
is located in a straight flume. This does not undermine the above conclusions, yet even
433
strengthens the statement that designs B–D are preferred over design A in terms of
434
discharge division. Combining the effects of sill geometry on morphological evolution
435
of the side channel and discharge division over both channels, design C is a promising
436
sill geometry to be considered for field implementation.
437
6.4. Recommendations for future research
438
Although the present study provides clear insights in the morphological effects of
439
horizontal flow separation downstream of the bifurcation at the side channel intake,
440
direct measurements of flow velocities in the flow separation cell could provide com-
441
plementary insights on smaller scale flow patterns and large coherent structures. In
442
retrospect, using an ADV to measure flow velocities did not work out at some loca-
443
tions in the flume due to the limited water depth. The water depth cannot easily be
444
increased, because non-distorted geometric scaling is preferred due to the importance
445
of 3-D flow patterns. This calls for the use of additional measurement methods to mon-
446
itor flow velocities. In the physical scale model, Particle Image Velocimetry could be
447
used to detect coherent structures at the water surface. Alternatively, 3-D numerical
448
modelling and a field campaign in which measurements are taken close to the LTD, us-
449
ing for instance an Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler, could shed light on the detailed
450
flow patterns in this region.
451
7. Conclusions
452
In a physical scale model representing the entrance region of a longitudinal training
453
dam where a sill is constructed, persistent morphological patterns are observed, which
454
resemble field observations. An inner-bend depositional bar develops against the side-
455
channel side of the LTD, analogous to the deposition in the horizontal flow recirculation
456
zone in a sharp river bend. This bar is largely eroded again during high flows. In the
457
upstream part of the side channel, a divergence bar is formed induced by divergence of
458
the flow where the river widens and the depth increases after the sill. Whether or not the
459
divergence bar is eroded during high flows depends on the geometry of the sill. Both
460
bar types are also observed in a field pilot in the Waal River. The degree of erosion or 23
461
sedimentation in the side channel during low and high flow conditions largely depends
462
on the geometry of the sill, which is therefore a suitable instrument for regulating sed-
463
iment transport into the side channel. To limit the amount of sedimentation in the side
464
channel downstream of the bifurcation point, a steep transition is desirable between the
465
sill and the LTD crest. The discharge into the side channel is primarily affected by the
466
cross-sectional area over the sill, and little dependent on other sill characteristics such
467
as the longitudinal slope. Overall, a downstream decreasing sill height (geometry C)
468
is promising because of the balance between minimised net sedimentation effects in
469
the side channel and the required discharge division during low and high water level
470
situations.
471
Acknowledgements
472
This research is part of the research programme RiverCare, supported by the Dutch
473
Technology Foundation STW, which is part of the Netherlands Organization for Sci-
474
entific Research (NWO), and which is partly funded by the Ministry of Economic Af-
475
fairs under grant number P12-14 (Perspective Programme). Additional support was
476
provided by Rijkswaterstaat, part of the Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure and Water
477
Management. We thank Johan R¨omelingh and Pieter Hazenberg (Wageningen Univer-
478
sity & Research) for their technical support. Furthermore, we owe thanks to Judith
479
Poelman, Bas Wullems and especially Daan van Keulen for their practical assistance
480
in the lab. The data and scripts used in this study are publicly available online on
481
https://hdl.handle.net/10411/INMSDG.
482
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63160c45-f3ed-4ad2-84c8-9a1db1e04f0a
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List of changes
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