4.7 Article

Mitigation of Channel Shoaling at a Sheltered Inlet Subject to Flood Gate Operations

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jmse8110865

Keywords

Delft3D model; maintenance dredging; Raritan Bay; tide; storm gate; small-craft harbor; shoaling; inlet morphology

Funding

  1. Office Maritime Resources, New Jersey Department of Transportation [17-32666]

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A comprehensive case study of Keansburg Inlet (New Jersey, USA) is presented with the objective of evaluating inlet management alternatives and assessing the influence of an operational flood gate on channel shoaling. The goal of the research is determining the most effective strategy for minimizing the frequency of maintenance dredging. This study compares the effectiveness of (1) traditional structural solutions; (2) modified dredging templates; and (3) assesses the influence of the flood gate operations during conditions representative of a typical year. Alternative analysis is completed using a coupled hydrodynamic-wave model (Delft3D-Flexible Mesh (FM)) with Real Time Control to simulate morphological changes. The model was calibrated and evaluated using collected field data. Water levels are reproduced within 6% of the spring tide range with lag times less than 20 min. The model results and observations suggest sediment transport is dominated by wave action with pronounced variations in dominant wave direction. The results indicate that changes to the operational dredging, or what the authors have termed broadly as adaptive dredging techniques, appear to deliver the most promising improvement. Model results suggest that the current operational procedures of the flood gate do not significantly alter the channel infilling rates and patterns during typical (i.e., non-extreme event) conditions.

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