4.7 Article

Eddy correlation flux measurements: The sediment surface area that contributes to the flux

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 52, Issue 4, Pages 1672-1684

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.4319/lo.2007.52.4.1672

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We investigated the size and shape of the area on the sediment surface, the so-called footprint, that contributes to the flux in subaqueous eddy correlation measurements. Tracer tracking simulations were performed for a dissolved conservative tracer released from the sediment surface into a current-driven flow not affected by density stratifications and surface waves. Simulations revealed that the footprint length (l) can be calculated as l = -2.783 - 158.7h + 159.2h(2) - 120.8h log(z(0)) (all units in m) for eddy correlation measurements heights (h) between 0.05 and 0.3 m above the sediment surface and for sediment surface roughness parameter (z(0)) values between 7.04 x 10(-6) and 0.01 m. The upstream distance (x(max)) to the location that contributes the strongest flux signal can likewise be estimated as x(max) = -0.09888 - 11.53h + 10.25h(2) - 6.650h log (z(0)). Because vertical turbulent mixing scales with mean current velocity, l and x(max) are independent of current velocity. The footprint width (w) can be calculated as w = 6.531h. These expressions were developed for water depths (H) of H > 27h. In the depth interval 6.7h < H < 27h, l can be calculated by multiplying the length, as given above, by the factor 1 + 8.347exp(- 0.2453 H/h), whereas x(max) is independent of H. For H < 6.7h, the tracer transfer rate over the air-water interface controls the size and shape of the footprint. All expressions are valid for isotropic turbulence, but as a first-order estimate, the expressions for l and x(max) also hold for anisotropic conditions. In contrast, w scales with root E-y / E-z, where E-y and E-z are the transverse and the vertical eddy diffusivity, respectively. Finally, we describe how site-specific values of z(0) and levels of anisotropy in a turbulent near-bottom flow can be extracted directly from eddy correlation measurements.

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