Morphology Change Validation of Shark River Inlet: Difference between revisions

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<font color=red>'''UNDER  CONSTRUCTION'''</font>
<font color=red>'''UNDER  CONSTRUCTION'''</font>


[[Image:Validation  Validation_SRI_-_Study_Area_Figure.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Figure    1. Shark River Inlet study area.]]


Shark River Inlet, located on the north New Jersey coast, is served by a federal navigation channel that has until recently required little maintenance dredging.  Although possessing a small estuary, the inlet is hydraulically efficient because of the small width to depth ratio of its entrance that is stabilized by parallel jetties.  After placement of approximately 4.8 million cubic meters of beach nourishment to the north and south of the inlet as part of an erosion-control project conducted in the late 1990s, inlet maintenance increased beyond that anticipated.   
Shark River Inlet, located on the north New Jersey coast, is served by a federal navigation channel that has until recently required little maintenance dredging.  Although possessing a small estuary, the inlet is hydraulically efficient because of the small width to depth ratio of its entrance that is stabilized by parallel jetties.  After placement of approximately 4.8 million cubic meters of beach nourishment to the north and south of the inlet as part of an erosion-control project conducted in the late 1990s, inlet maintenance increased beyond that anticipated.   

Revision as of 16:02, 17 November 2010

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

File:Validation Validation SRI - Study Area Figure.jpg
Figure 1. Shark River Inlet study area.

Shark River Inlet, located on the north New Jersey coast, is served by a federal navigation channel that has until recently required little maintenance dredging. Although possessing a small estuary, the inlet is hydraulically efficient because of the small width to depth ratio of its entrance that is stabilized by parallel jetties. After placement of approximately 4.8 million cubic meters of beach nourishment to the north and south of the inlet as part of an erosion-control project conducted in the late 1990s, inlet maintenance increased beyond that anticipated. The Coastal Modeling System (CMS) was established to numerically simulate waves, current, sand transport, and morphology change. Below describes the calibration and validation of water levels, current, and morphologic change.


Model Setup and Calibration

The Coastal Modeling System (CMS), a coupled numerical model of waves and finite-volume, depth-averaged circulation, sediment transport, and morphology change, was established for Shark Rive Inlet. Two CMS model grids were developed for representing Shark River Inlet, one for CMS-Wave and the other for CMS-Flow and sand transport. The CMS was driven by tide and hindcast waves. The Lund-CIRP transport formula (Camenen and Larson 2007) was selected as the governing empirical formulas to calculate bedload and suspended load within CMS-Flow for combined waves (breaking and non-breaking) and current. Bed change is calculated over the same sediment transport timestep, which was 900 seconds (15 minutes), and updated in both the wave and flow models. Bed change was updated in the wave model on the steering interval of 3 hours. An existing condition from a recent January 2009 bathymetry formed the basis to generate a grid for a contemporary representation of the inlet after dredging (Figure 3), and was used to calibrate the model.

File:Validation SRI Morphology Change.png
Figure 3. Telescoping Grid.


Calibration of the CMS for was completed in two parts: first, through comparison of measured and calculated hydrodynamics, and secondly through comparison of morphologic end-states through validating channel infilling rates and morphologic patterns. Observed water levels and measured current velocity in the Shark River estuary and inlet, collected on 20 August 2009, were used in the original hydrodynamic calibration (Beck and Kraus 2010). Beck and Kraus (2010) also compared measured and calculated current velocity at the centrally-located peak velocity in the three main channels (Figure 6). Measurements and calculations show close correspondence for the main channel (CS 1) and south channel (CS 3) with a Root Mean Absolute Error (RMAE) value of 3-5%, and an RMAE of 9 % for the north channel (CS2).

File:Validation SRI Morphology Change.png
Figure 4. Zoom in of telescoping grid over the backbay (note the detail of tidal creeks).
File:Validation SRI Morphology Change.png
Figure 5. Example of ebbing currents exiting the inlet.


Morphologic response was calibrated to the measured change from January 2009 to April 2009, a typical recent dredging interval, and served to verify channel cross-sections and infilling rates (Figure 28). Empirically derived coefficients for sediment transport were modified within the model to calibrate to sediment transport rates available for the region. The Lund-CIRP equations were calibrated to a specific equation, but allow for a range of coefficients between 0.5 and 2.0 for bedload and suspsended load transport. The model results for sediment transport are largely dependent on the wave forcing, and therefore the calculated morphology change will be driven by the quality of wave input. Because measured wave data is not available for the area, the WIS hindcast waves that were selected do not immitate the modeled time periods (January to April 2009), but they do represent an average January to April time period. Bedload and suspended load coefficients of 2.0 were found to better match estimated transport rates for Shark River Inlet.

The Non-equilibrium Transport (NET) method also controls the capacity of sediment transport through scaling factors such as adaptation lengths or times, generally dependent upon length-scales of morphologic features such as bedforms or timescales of sediment movement. As a total load formulation is used with the NET, the Adaptation Length must be modified to calibrate to morphology. The Adaptation Length is a length scaling factor that is typically based on localized bedforms. The smaller the Adaptation Length, the closer the model is to Equilibrium Transport which results in greater rates of transport that is more localized. Adaptation Lengths tested included 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, and 100 meters. An Adaptation Length of 100 m was selected for the entire domain of the final calculations because of the realistic patterns and volumetric changes observed in the calculations as compared to the measurements. Final parameter values were chosen to produce calibration of results to specific regions of interest, such as channel infilling in the dredged pit.


Table 1. Sediment transport and morphology parameters in the CMS

Parameter Value
Formulation Advection-Diffusion
Sediment Transport Formula Lund-CIRP
Bed Load Scaling Factor 1.0
Suspended Load Scaling Factor 1.0
Sediment Porosity 0.3
Bed Slope Coefficient 0.1
Morphologic Acceleration Factor 1.0
Total Load Adaptation Length Method Constant
Adaptation Length (m) 100.0

Validation

File:Validation SRI Morphology Change.png
Figure 5. Comparison of Measured 2005 Pre-Dredging Bathymetry with Calculated 2005 Pre-Dredging Bathymetry.

Morphologic response was calibrated to the measured change from January 2009 to April 2009, a typical recent dredging interval, and served to verify channel cross-sections and infilling rates (Figure 28). Based on the surveys, channel infilling volume expected for the 4-month simulation is 8,900 m3 for the entrance channel alone. The 4-month simulation produced a similar channel infilling volume of 9,200 m3 (RMAE of 3.4%) and morphologic patterns, as illustrated in Figure 7. A comparison of measured and calculated change along the transects in Figure 7 showed a high correlation with RMAE values of 7%, 11%, 2%, 4%, and 6% for Transects 1-5 respectively.


File:Validation SRI Morphology Change.png
Figure 6. Comparison of A) Measured Bathymetry with B) Calculated Bathymetry.


Table 2. Measured and calculated volume change for the dredged portion of Shark River Inlet

Dredged Channel !


Discussion

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References


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