Sediment Transport 1
Sediment Transport
Overview
For sand transport, the wash-load (i.e. sediment transport which does not contribute to the bed-material) can be assumed to be zero, and therefore, the total-load transport is equal to the sum of the bed- and the suspended-load transports: .
There are currently three sediment transport models available in CMS:
(1) Equilibrium total load
(2) Equilibrium bed load plus non-equilibrium suspended load, and
(3) Non-equilibrium total-load.
The first two models are single-size sediment transport models and are only available with the explicit time-stepping schemes. The third is multiple-sized sediment transport model and is available with both the explicit and implicit time-stepping schemes.
Equilibrium Total-load Transport Model
In this model, both the bed load and suspended load are assumed to be in equilibrium. The bed change is solved using a simple mass balance equation known as the Exner equation.
- (2-42)
for , where N is the number of sediment size classes and
- t = time [s]
- h = total water depth [m]
- =Cartesian coordinate in the jth direction [m]
- = equilibrium total-load transport rate [kg/m/s]
- = bed elevation with respect to the vertical datum [m]
- = bed porosity [-]
- = morphologic acceleration factor [-]
- = sediment density [~2650 kg/m3 for quartz sediment]
- = empirical bed-slope coefficient (constant) [-]