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Sedimentation to Consolidation

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1 Sedimentation to Consolidation
2009 Sediment Transport Symposium Cohesive sediment dynamics under water wave Sedimentation to Consolidation Wen-Yang Hsu, Hwung-Hweng Hwung, Ray-Yeng Yang, Igor V. Shugan Tainan Hydraulics Laboratory National Cheng-Kung Univ. Tainan, TAIWAN.

2 Outline Introduction Literature Review Sedimentation to consolidation
Summary and future work

3 Ch. 1 Introduction Motivation Problem Identification Objectives
Literature Review Sedimentation to consolidation Summary and future work

4 Motivation Fundamental Researches:
Cohesive Sediment Dynamics in Marine Environment Fundamental Researches: Wave-mud interaction, fine sediment transport Engineering Problems: Coastal protection, land reclamation, dredging of deepwater navigational channels, water quality management and military application.

5 Problem Identification (1/2)
2002, Fine sediment dynamics in the marine environment CBS: concentrated benthic suspension

6 Problem Identification (2/2)
Sedimentation to Consolidation Dynamic response of fluid mud layer

7 Objectives Sedimentation Consolidation
Settling function, transition region, dispersion effects Consolidation Effective stress, temporal variation of interface

8 Ch. 2 Introduction Literature Review Sedimentation to consolidation
Properties of mud Sedimentation and consolidation Wave-mud interaction Sedimentation to consolidation Summary and future work

9 Properties of mud Bio-physical-chemical Properties
Composition: clay, silt, water, organic and inorganic maters Size: smaller than 63 μm ( clay <4 μm , silt <63μm) Structure: fragile, non-spherical Molecular Electrons: attractive force and repulsive force Brady, N.C. and R.R. Weil, 1999, The nature and properties of soil, Prentice-Hall,Upper Saddel River, NJ Kaolinite Illite, Chlorite

10 Behavior of mud Plasticity: is the ability of a clay mass to undergo deformation before breaking. Cohesion: is the ability of a material to stick or adhere together. Flocculation: occurs when two particles collide and stick together and effected by three agents: Brown Motion (Dyer, 1986) Turbulent Shear (Hunt, 1986) Differential Settling (Van Leussen, 1994)

11 Sedimentation

12 Sedimentation (1/3) Kynch(1952):
Assume that the settling velocity depends only on the local concentration. ws=ws0 f(C)

13 Sedimentation (2/3) Owen (1976) Milkkelsen(2001)
Settling column Milkkelsen(2001) Laser In Situ Scattering and Transmissometry Fennesy(1994) Measurement of size floc by taking picture in a dilute suspension Point out these drawbacks

14 Sedimentation (3/3) Fugate (2002)
Vertical 1-D equation of conservation of sediment mass in the water column Steady state at slack tides at a fixed point Similarity of Fick’s law Balance between gravitational settling and diffusive dispersion

15 Consolidation (1/2)

16 Consolidation (2/2) Hight (1987):
Transition point between suspension and soil

17 Ch. 3 Introduction Literature Review Sedimentation to consolidation
Bed material test Settling behavior Consolidation Process Dynamic response of fluid mud Summary and future work

18 Bed Material Test Selection of sediments Kaolinite, 6180, 211…
Size distribution and specific density d50, dry density Rheological property Viscosity, yield stress, creep behavior Composition analysis By X-Ray analysis

19 Preliminary Result Clay(<4um): 28 % Silt(4~63um): 67 %
Fine sand (125~250um): 5% D50=10.8um Clay components (<2um) Kaolinite (69%), Illite (30%) with a small fraction of SiO2 Slope: viscosity Inflection point: yield stress

20 Settling behavior From gravitational settling to hindered settling Discuss significant factors which would change the floc size, density, and then, settling velocity. Establish settling function as a background information.

21 Experimental Setup

22 Experiment Focus Kaolinite, 6180 at fresh water and salt water
Different sediment and ambient water condition Kaolinite, 6180 at fresh water and salt water Range of concentration 100mg/L~20000mg/L (intense data around transition region) Diffusive dispersion effect and mechanisms of shock waves The relations between diffusion and no-shock waves ABS and ADV calibration for converting backscatter signal to SSC Measurement of settling velocity Tracing shock wave, mass conservation, ADV approach

23 Preliminary Results

24 From settling to consolidation process
Formation of lutocline, fluid mud and consolidating bed Transition region between sedimentation and solid bottom will be major subject. Time function, distribution of concentration and stress should be important background for mud motion

25 Experimental Setup Initial SSC would start from 1000 mg/L~100000mg/L

26 Preliminary Results ABS Data Backscatter

27 Backscatter

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29 Expected Results Sedimentation
Settling function, effect of salinity and shock wave mechanism Consolidation Consolidation function, response of effective stress

30 Thank You! Please Comment
Team: H.-H. Hwung (Principal Investigator) J. P.-Y. Maa I. V. Shugan R.-Y. Yang C.-M. Liu H.-C. Hsu Y. Chang W.-Y. Hsu H.-L. Wu Thank you! Please Comment

31 Thank You Please Comment

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34 Ch. 4 Introduction Literature Review Sedimentation to consolidation
Dynamic response of fluid mud Summary and future work

35 Dynamic response of fluid mud
Energy transformation and energy dissipation due to wave-mud interaction Dynamic response of pressure, concentration, velocity and rheology property in mud layer. Occurrence of resonance

36 Experimental Setup

37 Preliminary Results


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