Flow Bifurcation at a Longitudinal Training Dam : Effects on Local Morphology

Longitudinal training dams (LTDs) have been built over a length of 10 km in the Dutch River Waal as an alternative to groyne fields, splitting the river in a fairway and a bank-connected side channel in the inner bend. Here, we study the physical mechanisms governing the three-dimensional flow and its effect on local morphology at the flow divide using a mobile bed physical model of an LTD, centred around a side channel intake. In line with previous experiments, polystyrene granules are used as a lightweight sediment that allows to achieve dynamic similarity between the model and the prototype. An Acoustic Doppler Velocimetry (ADV) profiler is used to monitor the flow characteristics, whereas a line laser scanner set-up is used to measure the morphological imprint of the flow near the bifurcation point. To study the dependence of the results on the sill height at the side channel intake, different forms and heights of the sill are used. First results show striking similarities with measurements from the field pilot in the Waal River, as well as larger sedimentation in the side channel for a uniform low sill compared to a downstream increasing sill height.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: De Ruijsscher, Timo, Naqshband, Suleyman, Hoitink, Ton
Format: Article in monograph or in proceedings biblioteca
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences
Subjects:Life Science,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/flow-bifurcation-at-a-longitudinal-training-dam-effects-on-local-
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5416432024-07-02 De Ruijsscher, Timo Naqshband, Suleyman Hoitink, Ton Article in monograph or in proceedings River Flow 2018 - Ninth International Conference on Fluvial Hydraulics Flow Bifurcation at a Longitudinal Training Dam : Effects on Local Morphology 2018 Longitudinal training dams (LTDs) have been built over a length of 10 km in the Dutch River Waal as an alternative to groyne fields, splitting the river in a fairway and a bank-connected side channel in the inner bend. Here, we study the physical mechanisms governing the three-dimensional flow and its effect on local morphology at the flow divide using a mobile bed physical model of an LTD, centred around a side channel intake. In line with previous experiments, polystyrene granules are used as a lightweight sediment that allows to achieve dynamic similarity between the model and the prototype. An Acoustic Doppler Velocimetry (ADV) profiler is used to monitor the flow characteristics, whereas a line laser scanner set-up is used to measure the morphological imprint of the flow near the bifurcation point. To study the dependence of the results on the sill height at the side channel intake, different forms and heights of the sill are used. First results show striking similarities with measurements from the field pilot in the Waal River, as well as larger sedimentation in the side channel for a uniform low sill compared to a downstream increasing sill height. en EDP Sciences application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/flow-bifurcation-at-a-longitudinal-training-dam-effects-on-local- 10.1051/e3sconf/20184005020 https://edepot.wur.nl/461169 Life Science https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Life Science
Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Life Science
De Ruijsscher, Timo
Naqshband, Suleyman
Hoitink, Ton
Flow Bifurcation at a Longitudinal Training Dam : Effects on Local Morphology
description Longitudinal training dams (LTDs) have been built over a length of 10 km in the Dutch River Waal as an alternative to groyne fields, splitting the river in a fairway and a bank-connected side channel in the inner bend. Here, we study the physical mechanisms governing the three-dimensional flow and its effect on local morphology at the flow divide using a mobile bed physical model of an LTD, centred around a side channel intake. In line with previous experiments, polystyrene granules are used as a lightweight sediment that allows to achieve dynamic similarity between the model and the prototype. An Acoustic Doppler Velocimetry (ADV) profiler is used to monitor the flow characteristics, whereas a line laser scanner set-up is used to measure the morphological imprint of the flow near the bifurcation point. To study the dependence of the results on the sill height at the side channel intake, different forms and heights of the sill are used. First results show striking similarities with measurements from the field pilot in the Waal River, as well as larger sedimentation in the side channel for a uniform low sill compared to a downstream increasing sill height.
format Article in monograph or in proceedings
topic_facet Life Science
author De Ruijsscher, Timo
Naqshband, Suleyman
Hoitink, Ton
author_facet De Ruijsscher, Timo
Naqshband, Suleyman
Hoitink, Ton
author_sort De Ruijsscher, Timo
title Flow Bifurcation at a Longitudinal Training Dam : Effects on Local Morphology
title_short Flow Bifurcation at a Longitudinal Training Dam : Effects on Local Morphology
title_full Flow Bifurcation at a Longitudinal Training Dam : Effects on Local Morphology
title_fullStr Flow Bifurcation at a Longitudinal Training Dam : Effects on Local Morphology
title_full_unstemmed Flow Bifurcation at a Longitudinal Training Dam : Effects on Local Morphology
title_sort flow bifurcation at a longitudinal training dam : effects on local morphology
publisher EDP Sciences
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/flow-bifurcation-at-a-longitudinal-training-dam-effects-on-local-
work_keys_str_mv AT deruijsschertimo flowbifurcationatalongitudinaltrainingdameffectsonlocalmorphology
AT naqshbandsuleyman flowbifurcationatalongitudinaltrainingdameffectsonlocalmorphology
AT hoitinkton flowbifurcationatalongitudinaltrainingdameffectsonlocalmorphology
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