OS23B-1201:
The effect of bed forms on the dynamics of the fluid mud transport: preliminary insights from field observations and numerical simulations

Tuesday, 16 December 2014
Celalettin E Ozdemir, Louisiana State University, Civil & Environmental Engineering, Baton Rouge, LA, United States and Peter Traykovski, Woods Hole Oceanograph Inst, Falmouth, MA, United States
Abstract:
Understanding the dynamics and the transport mechanisms of fluidmud is crucial to illuminate the details regarding the attenuation in the surface wave energy over muddy seabed and wave-supported gravity-driven mud flows that take place in nearshore environments. Although there is significant progress through theoretical, experimental, and numerical studies, little attention has been drawn to the intricate alteration in the fluidmud transport over bedforms that inherently exist in the actual field conditions. Specifically, interfacial waves at the fluidmud interface were observed in coastal Louisiana as a part of MURI field experiments in 2010. It is also observed that wave attenuation was dominated by viscous processes during laminar flow and attenuation decreased duing the transition to turbulence. Considering the slow growth of shear instability at the interface, bed forms have a critical role to initiate the growth of interfacial waves and the subsequent transition to turbulence. In this study, we investigate the role of bed forms on the dynamics of moderately thin fluidmud layer via large eddy simulations. Three mud viscosity values, based on the field observations, are tested for a 20 centimeters of mud layer over ripples: (i)ν = 1 x 10-3, (ii) ν = 1 x 10-4 , and (iii) ν = 1 x 10-5 . In Case (i), wave energy dissipation is nearly the same as the one over a flat bed. Case (ii) shows that there is a 10 to 20 percent increase in the wave energy dissipation especially at the fluidmud interface. Finally, in Case (iii), we observe the high-energy transitional flow characteristics. In this presentation, we shall also share the detailed analyses of these simulations.Understanding the dynamics and the transport mechanisms of fluidmud is crucial to illuminate the details regarding the attenuation in the surface wave energy over muddy seabed and wave-supported gravity-driven mud flows that take place in nearshore environments. Although there is significant progress through theoretical, experimental, and numerical studies, little attention has been drawn to the intricate alteration in the fluidmud transport over bedforms that inherently exist in the actual field conditions. Specifically, interfacial waves at the fluidmud interface were observed in coastal Louisiana as a part of MURI field experiments in 2010. It is also observed that wave attenuation was dominated by viscous processes during laminar flow and attenuation decreased duing the transition to turbulence. Considering the slow growth of shear instability at the interface, bed forms have a critical role to initiate the growth of interfacial waves and the subsequent transition to turbulence. In this study, we investigate the role of bed forms on the dynamics of moderately thin fluidmud layer via large eddy simulations. Three mud viscosity values, based on the field observations, are tested for a 20 cm’s of mud layer over ripples: (i)ν = 1 x 10-3, (ii) ν = 1 x 10-4 , and (iii) ν = 1 x 10-5 . In Case (i), wave energy dissipation is nearly the same as the one over a flat bed. Case (ii) shows that there is a 10 to 20 % increase in the wave energy dissipation especially at the fluidmud interface. Finally, in Case (iii), we observe the high-energy transitional flow characteristics.