Ill-posedness in modeling mixed sediment river morphodynamics

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

V. Chavarrias Borras (TU Delft - Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineering)

G. Stecca (Università di Trento, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA))

A Blom (TU Delft - Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineering)

Research Group
Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineering
Copyright
© 2018 V. Chavarrias Borras, G. Stecca, A. Blom
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.advwatres.2018.02.011
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 V. Chavarrias Borras, G. Stecca, A. Blom
Research Group
Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineering
Volume number
114
Pages (from-to)
219-235
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

In this paper we analyze the Hirano active layer model used in mixed sediment river morphodynamics concerning its ill-posedness. Ill-posedness causes the solution to be unstable to short-wave perturbations. This implies that the solution presents spurious oscillations, the amplitude of which depends on the domain discretization. Ill-posedness not only produces physically unrealistic results but may also cause failure of numerical simulations. By considering a two-fraction sediment mixture we obtain analytical expressions for the mathematical characterization of the model. Using these we show that the ill-posed domain is larger than what was found in previous analyses, not only comprising cases of bed degradation into a substrate finer than the active layer but also in aggradational cases. Furthermore, by analyzing a three-fraction model we observe ill-posedness under conditions of bed degradation into a coarse substrate. We observe that oscillations in the numerical solution of ill-posed simulations grow until the model becomes well-posed, as the spurious mixing of the active layer sediment and substrate sediment acts as a regularization mechanism. Finally we conduct an eigenstructure analysis of a simplified vertically continuous model for mixed sediment for which we show that ill-posedness occurs in a wider range of conditions than the active layer model.