Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4525820 | Advances in Water Resources | 2012 | 8 Pages |
Morphodynamic models of coastal evolution require relatively simple parameterizations of sediment transport for application over larger scales. Calantoni and Thaxton (2008) [6] presented a transport parameterization for bimodal distributions of coarse quartz grains derived from detailed boundary layer simulations for sheet flow and near sheet flow conditions. The simulation results, valid over a range of wave forcing conditions and large- to small-grain diameter ratios, were successfully parameterized with a simple power law that allows for the prediction of the transport rates of each size fraction. Here, we have applied the simple power law to a two-dimensional cellular automaton to simulate sheet flow transport. Model results are validated with experiments performed in the small oscillating flow tunnel (S-OFT) at the Naval Research Laboratory at Stennis Space Center, MS, in which sheet flow transport was generated with a bed composed of a bimodal distribution of non-cohesive grains. The work presented suggests that, under the conditions specified, algorithms that incorporate the power law may correctly reproduce laboratory bed surface measurements of bimodal sheet flow transport while inherently incorporating vertical mixing by size.
► We simulate bimodal sediment transport under oscillatory sheet flow conditions. ► Simulations predict longitudinal bed evolution and distribution by grain size. ► We validate our simulation technique with a controlled laboratory experiment. ► Vertical bed gradation by size was also simulated but not experimentally validated.