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Tidal Inlets Hydraulics and Morphological Modeling: An application to Mundaú Lagoon, Brazi

Nunes De Brito Junior, Almir LU (2020)
Abstract
Tidal inlets are narrow channels connecting coastal lagoons to the sea and in this way controlling the exchange of water while serving as navigational pathways. These important components of the coast are also very dynamic environments, having their morphology determined by multiple sediment transport processes, making tidal inlets difficult to model. Expected future sea level rise imposes an added challenge to the management and maintenance of the inlets and also of the connected lagoons, in particular for poorly studied regions that often lack data to support more detailed morphological models. The present thesis advances the development of new numerical and analytical models to be used in... (More)
Tidal inlets are narrow channels connecting coastal lagoons to the sea and in this way controlling the exchange of water while serving as navigational pathways. These important components of the coast are also very dynamic environments, having their morphology determined by multiple sediment transport processes, making tidal inlets difficult to model. Expected future sea level rise imposes an added challenge to the management and maintenance of the inlets and also of the connected lagoons, in particular for poorly studied regions that often lack data to support more detailed morphological models. The present thesis advances the development of new numerical and analytical models to be used in preliminary studies and to serve as useful tools for qualitative and quantitative assessment of tidal inlet hydraulics and morphology. The study validated the developed approaches against a natural and dynamic inlet-lagoon system: the Mundaú Lagoon (northeastern Brazil). Furthermore, the research investigated internal processes of this lagoon that are affected by the flow through its inlet, such as the water exchange, during the critical dry season scenario, and the impacts of the tidal exchange on the lagoon salinity dynamics and population of its characteristic mussels. A semi-analytical approach was developed based on the classical Keulegan equations, resulting in a series of expressions in non-dimensional form, describing key characteristics of the inlet flow as the lagoon levels response to tides, tidal prism, and inlet velocities, having as the main independent variable the repletion coefficient. These flow expressions were then used in a sediment balance equation for the inlet evolution resulting in diagrams of inlet equilibrium for different scenarios related to inlet geometry configurations. The numerical model for the inlet morphology was applied in the Mundaú lagoon inlet long-term (decadal) and validated through schematic simulations and an application to a complex set of forcing conditions. In this way, the inlet evolution was estimated through the evolution of the inlet width, based on a geometrically similar idealization of the cross-section. The approach taken resulted in a satisfactory description of the inlet evolution through fast simulations and showing potential for long-term assessment of the inlet morphology. In conclusion, the developed models demonstrated the ability to reproduce the main characteristics of the inlet flow and morphological evolution, requiring only key information about the inlet and lagoon geometries as well as the main forcing. Furthermore, the fast execution times required by the numerical model is promising for applications in a probabilistic manner exploring multiple future scenarios (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Prof.. Jimenez, Jose A., Barcelona Tech, Spain.
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Tidal inlets, Numerical modeling, Coastal lagoons, Mundaú Lagoon, Sururu, Sediment transport
pages
88 pages
publisher
Water Resources Engineering, Lund University
defense location
Lecture hall V:B, building V, John Ericssons väg 1, Faculty of Engineering LTH, Lund University, Lund. Follow via Youtube: https://youtu.be/tBE_EZsrjRQ
defense date
2020-06-05 10:15:00
ISBN
978-91-7895-501-5
978-91-7895-500-8
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
caa04bde-1984-414e-b558-6fdeca5ec476
date added to LUP
2020-04-29 10:58:38
date last changed
2024-02-13 11:08:06
@phdthesis{caa04bde-1984-414e-b558-6fdeca5ec476,
  abstract     = {{Tidal inlets are narrow channels connecting coastal lagoons to the sea and in this way  controlling  the  exchange  of  water  while  serving  as  navigational  pathways. These  important  components  of  the  coast  are  also  very  dynamic  environments, having  their  morphology  determined  by  multiple  sediment  transport  processes, making tidal inlets difficult to model. Expected future sea level rise imposes an added challenge to the management and maintenance of the inlets and also of the connected lagoons, in particular for poorly studied regions that often lack data to support more detailed morphological models. The  present  thesis  advances  the  development  of  new  numerical  and  analytical models to be used in preliminary studies and to serve as useful tools for qualitative and quantitative assessment of tidal inlet hydraulics and morphology. The study validated  the  developed  approaches  against  a  natural  and  dynamic  inlet-lagoon system:  the  Mundaú  Lagoon  (northeastern  Brazil).  Furthermore,  the  research investigated internal processes of this lagoon that are affected by the flow through its inlet, such as the water exchange, during the critical dry season scenario, and the impacts of the tidal exchange on the lagoon salinity dynamics and population of its characteristic mussels. A  semi-analytical  approach  was  developed  based  on  the  classical  Keulegan equations, resulting in a series of expressions in non-dimensional form, describing key characteristics of the inlet flow as the lagoon levels response to tides, tidal prism, and inlet velocities, having as the main independent variable the repletion coefficient. These flow expressions were then used in a sediment balance equation for  the  inlet  evolution  resulting  in  diagrams  of  inlet  equilibrium  for  different scenarios related to inlet geometry configurations.  The numerical model for the inlet morphology was applied in the Mundaú lagoon inlet  long-term  (decadal)  and  validated  through  schematic  simulations  and  an application to a complex set of forcing conditions. In this way, the inlet evolution was estimated through the evolution of the inlet width, based on a geometrically similar  idealization  of  the  cross-section.  The  approach  taken  resulted  in  a satisfactory description of the inlet evolution through fast simulations and showing potential for long-term assessment of the inlet morphology. In conclusion, the developed models demonstrated the ability to reproduce the main characteristics of the inlet flow and morphological evolution, requiring only key information  about  the  inlet  and lagoon  geometries  as  well  as  the  main  forcing. Furthermore, the fast execution times required by the numerical model is promising for applications in a probabilistic manner exploring multiple future scenarios}},
  author       = {{Nunes De Brito Junior, Almir}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7895-501-5}},
  keywords     = {{Tidal inlets; Numerical modeling; Coastal lagoons; Mundaú Lagoon; Sururu; Sediment transport}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  publisher    = {{Water Resources Engineering, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Tidal Inlets Hydraulics and Morphological Modeling: An application to Mundaú Lagoon, Brazi}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/78996406/Almir_Nunes_De_Brito_web.pdf}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}