Delta Transport Processes Laboratory

Lab For Surface And Internal Wave-Induced Currents Under Rotation

Abstract (2024)
Author(s)

Paul Maxime Bayle (TU Delft - Environmental Fluid Mechanics)

L.N.M. Middelplaats (TU Delft - EMSD EEMCS Project engineers M)

C.F. Weststeijn (TU Delft - EMSD EEMCS Project engineers M)

P. van der Gaag (TU Delft - Lab Hydraulic Engineering)

J. Mol (TU Delft - Environmental Fluid Mechanics)

C. Willems (TU Delft - Lab Hydraulic Engineering)

Bas Hofland (TU Delft - Hydraulic Structures and Flood Risk)

T.S. Van Den Bremer (TU Delft - Environmental Fluid Mechanics)

Environmental Fluid Mechanics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.59490/coastlab.2024.757
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Environmental Fluid Mechanics
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Abstract

The presence of marine pollutants such as marine plastics has increased significantly over the last decades and poses a major environmental problem, in both the coastal and offshore area. Marine pollutants are transported, mixed and diffused in the ocean, which means the understanding and modelling of marine transport is key for mitigation purposes (Moulton et al., 2022). Additional to large scale and planetary currents that play a major role in marine transport, free surface waves, internal gravity waves in density stratified fluids and the Coriolis force due to the rotation of the Earth are also fundamental drivers of transport that need to be accounted for. The fundamental fluid mechanics processes associated with these are often not resolved in large-scale models, but are instead included in a parametrised form. However, some fundamental processes associated with wave-induced currents (e.g., Stokes drift) in rotating, density-stratified fluids with a free surface remain unclear and untested. In addition, parametrisation for different environments, forcings and time scales must be developed and tested before being implemented into models for them to reliably predict transport, accumulation and storage of marine pollutants. For this purpose, the Delta Transport Processes Laboratory (DTPLab) is being developed at TUDelft Hydraulic Engineering Laboratory. This laboratory pioneers the combined experimental study of surface waves, density stratification and Coriolis forces in a single laboratory. The DTPLab was designed with a multi- users and purposes vision, with interchangeable facilities and state-of-the-art measurement devices. This paper presents the DTPLab facilities (under construction) and equipment that make this laboratory unique in the world, and describes, as an example of what is feasible, a novel experiment that will be performed in this lab.</jats:p>