4.7 Article

Lateral Variation of Tidal Mixing Asymmetry and Its Impact on the Longitudinal Sediment Transport in Turbidity Maximum Zone of Salt Wedge Estuary

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jmse10070907

Keywords

lateral bathymetry; vertical mixing; sediment transport; turbidity maximum zone; Yangtze estuary

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China-The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research-Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (NSFC-NWO-EPSRC) [51761135023]
  2. China Geological Survey [DD20190260]
  3. State Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs of China via the High-end Foreign Expert Project [G20200009096]

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This study focuses on the lateral variation of tidal mixing asymmetry and longitudinal sediment transport at the landward boundary of turbidity maximum zone in the North Channel of Yangtze estuary. The analysis reveals that there is regular tidal mixing asymmetry in the main channel, with stronger vertical mixing during flood tide. This results in higher suspended sediment concentrations during flood tide and landward sediment transport. On the shoal, the tidal mixing asymmetry is reversed, with weaker vertical mixing during flood tide and seaward sediment transport. Additionally, large river discharge increases the seaward advection sediment flux in the main channel, contributing to the seaward tidally averaged sediment flux.
The lateral bathymetry in the estuary results in different degrees of tidal mixing asymmetry, which has significant impacts on the longitudinal sediment transport by changing the temporal variation of vertical eddy diffusion. This study focus on the lateral variation of tidal mixing asymmetry and longitudinal sediment transport at the landward boundary of turbidity maximum zone in the North Channel of Yangtze estuary, which is a typical time-dependent salt wedge estuary. A transect survey was carried out in December, 2018; five vertical profiles of flow velocity, salinity and suspended sediment concentration were simultaneously measured covering a spring tidal cycle. Analysis of the data revealed that, after the maximum ebb, the stratification in the main and secondary channel was stronger than that on the shoal. In the channel, during ebb tide, the stronger stratification restrained the turbulent mixing induced by vertical shear, vertical mixing during the flood tide was stronger than that during ebb tide and vertical mixing coefficients ranged from 0.06 to 0.12, showing regular tidal mixing asymmetry over a flood-ebb tidal cycle. Therefore, stronger eddy diffusion caused by vertical mixing resulted in higher suspended sediment concentrations during flood tide, the larger landward tidally averaged sediment transport rate was induced by tidal pumping with the transportation of flood tidal current and the net sediment transport over a flood-ebb tidal cycle in the channel was landward. Meanwhile, on the shoal, under the effect of vertical shear, the vertical mixing during flood tide was weaker than that during ebb tide; vertical mixing coefficients ranged from -0.27 to -0.02, showing the reversed tidal mixing asymmetry. Higher suspended sediment concentration was transported seaward by the ebb current, the tidally averaged sediment transport rate by both tidal pumping and advection was seaward and the net sediment transport was seaward. Furthermore, large river discharge increased the seaward advection sediment flux on the surface layer in the main channel, resulting in the seaward tidally averaged sediment flux. Strong resuspension increased the seaward advection sediment flux near the bottom in the main and secondary channel, resulting in the seaward tidally averaged sediment flux.

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