4.5 Article

Infiltration of fine sediment into a coarse mobile bed: a phenomenological study

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume 42, Issue 8, Pages 1171-1185

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.4080

Keywords

infiltration; kinetic sieving; spontaneous percolation; sediment transport; grain sorting

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. French 'Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers' programme EC2CO-BIOHEFECT
  3. DRIL
  4. ANR (French national research agency) project SegSed
  5. ExploraDoc grant from la Region Rhone-Alpes
  6. Irstea

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Experiments were undertaken to study the nature of granular interaction in running water by examining the influence of fine grain inputs to a coarser sediment bed with a mobile surface. Video recordings of grain sorting by both kinetic sieving and spontaneous percolation are used to diagnose the critical processes controlling the overall bed response. Kinetic sieving takes place in the mobile bed surface, with the finer sediment moving to the bottom of the bedload transport layer at the interface with the underlying quasi-static coarse bed. We show that the behavior at this interface dictates how a channel responds to a fine sediment input. If, by spontaneous percolation, the fine sediment is able to infiltrate into the underlying quasi-static bed, the total transport increases and the channel degrades. However, if the fine sediment input rate exceeds the transport capacity or is geometrically unable to infiltrate into the underlying bed, it forms a quasi-static layer underneath the transport layer that inhibits entrainment from the underlying bed, resulting in aggradation and an increase in bed slope. Copyright (c) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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