Print Email Facebook Twitter Experimental and Numerical Modelling of Deep-Sea-Mining-Generated Turbidity Currents Title Experimental and Numerical Modelling of Deep-Sea-Mining-Generated Turbidity Currents Author Elerian, M.F.A.I. (TU Delft Offshore and Dredging Engineering) van Rhee, C. (TU Delft Offshore and Dredging Engineering) Helmons, R.L.J. (TU Delft Offshore and Dredging Engineering; Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)) Date 2022 Abstract Renewable energy installations and energy storage solutions require significant quantities of critical raw materials such as nickel, cobalt and rare earth metals. The supply chains of these raw materials face many difficulties, such as the continuous decrease of mineral ore grades on land. In view of these complications, the motivation to search for new resources has grown, with the deep sea being seen as a potential source of these minerals. Polymetallic nodule mining generates turbidity currents, which could negatively impact the deep-sea environment. For that reason, we investigate this type of current experimentally and numerically in order to characterize the generated turbidity current. Various non-cohesive sediment types, i.e., different particle sizes, and different concentrations are tested using a lock-exchange set-up. Three sediment types (glass beads, silica sand and a 50/50 blend of glass beads and silica sand) with seven initial sediment concentrations are examined. Additionally, for the numerical work, a drift–flux modelling approach is used to simulate the performed lock-exchange experiments. The results show that the front velocities of the currents resulting from the three sediment types increases with increasing initial concentrations inside the lock regardless. Moreover, using the same initial concentration, the difference in front velocities between the generated currents of the three sediment types decreases as the initial concentration increases. When using an initial volumetric concentration of 2.5% and 3%, the difference in front velocities between the generated current of the three sediment types vanishes. Finally, by comparing the numerical and experimental results, the drift–flux model is proven to be a reliable numerical model for predicting the current. Subject deep sea miningpolymetallic nodulessediment depositionsediment–water dischargeturbidity currentswater entrainment To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:0fd24e28-37d1-40bf-9d0e-7f4b238e3060 DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/min12050558 ISSN 2075-163X Source Minerals - Open Access Mining & Mineral Processing Journal, 12 (5) Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2022 M.F.A.I. Elerian, C. van Rhee, R.L.J. Helmons Files PDF minerals_12_00558_v2.pdf 2.7 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:0fd24e28-37d1-40bf-9d0e-7f4b238e3060/datastream/OBJ/view