Print Email Facebook Twitter Effect of flocculation on turbidity currents Title Effect of flocculation on turbidity currents Author Ali, W. (TU Delft Environmental Fluid Mechanics) Enthoven, D.H.B. (Student TU Delft) Kirichek, Alex (TU Delft Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineering) Chassagne, C. (TU Delft Environmental Fluid Mechanics) Helmons, R.L.J. (TU Delft Offshore and Dredging Engineering) Date 2022 Abstract Flocculation between inorganic sediment, salt ions and microscopic organicmatter present in the marine environment might play an important role in thedynamics of turbidity currents. The ability to predict, understand, and potentiallyleverage the effect of flocculation on turbidity currents will help to minimize theimpact of human interventions such as dredging, trenching, and deep-seamining. To better characterize the effect of flocculation on the benthic turbiditycurrents generated by these activities, a series of laboratory experiments wereperformed. Turbidity currents were created by means of lock exchangeexperiments. The present work focuses on the flocculation of clays that arerepresentative for abyssal regions where deep-sea mining is performed, butmost of the conclusions of this work are generic and can be applied to othertypes of benthic flows, occuring in harbours and channels. The effect of salt andorganic material as flocculant agent was investigated. Various concentrations ofclay and organic flocculant were tested. Video analysis was used to determinethe head velocity of the plume. Samples at different run-out lengths werecollected at the end of the lock exchange experiments for particle size andsettling velocity measurements. The velocities of the turbidity currents in freshand saline water (when no organic matter was present) were found to be similar,which was expected considering the timescales of salt-induced flocculation(about 30 min or more compared to the duration of lock exchangeexperiment <60 s). It was however demonstrated that, in presence oforganic matter, flocculation occurred during the short time (30–60 s) of theexperiment, leading to a reduced current propagation and a significant changein floc sizes (from 20 to 1,000 μm) and settling velocities (from 1 to 60mms−1).Salt ions contributed to flocculation in the sense that flocculation with organicmatter was improved in the presence of salt. Subject flocculationdeep sea miningorganic mattercohesive sedimentdredging plume To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:9d4339a2-70a7-4a2e-aae9-3c38a556806a DOI https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.1014170 ISSN 2296-6463 Source Frontiers in earth science, 10, 1-12 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2022 W. Ali, D.H.B. Enthoven, Alex Kirichek, C. Chassagne, R.L.J. Helmons Files PDF feart_10_1014170.pdf 3.59 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:9d4339a2-70a7-4a2e-aae9-3c38a556806a/datastream/OBJ/view