Monitoring Settling and Consolidation of Fluid Mud in a Laboratory Using Ultrasonic Measurements

Conference Paper (2021)
Author(s)

I. Fadel (University of Twente)

Alex Kirichek (Deltares, TU Delft - Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineering)

M. Buisman (TU Delft - Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics)

H.K.J. Heller (TU Delft - Lab Geoscience and Engineering)

D.S. Draganov (TU Delft - Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.202120168 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
ISBN (electronic)
9789462823860
Event
Downloads counter
100

Abstract

Ultrasound measurements are routinely used to evaluate the safe depth for ships navigation-nautical depth-at waterways and ports using single-beam dual-frequency echo-sounders. The nautical depth is routinely defined by suspension density in the range of 1100-1300 kg/m3 in the mud layer. While ultrasound measurements have a weak sensitivity to density variations, calibration is always needed to convert ultrasound measurements into reliable indicators for nautical depth levels in the mud layers using densely distributed density rheological in-situ measurements. We present a laboratory ultrasonic transmission experiment to monitor the fluid mud's settling and consolidation processes using a sample from the Port of Rotterdam. We use P-and S-wave ultrasonic transducers in the frequency range between 200 to 1000 kHz. Our results show that the P-wave velocities slightly increase during the consolidation and settling process while the P-wave amplitudes decrease. On the other hand, we observe a high S-wave velocity that increases together with amplitudes over time. The P-and S-wave amplitude and S-wave velocity variation over time correlate well with the mud average density variation. The presented results can be very useful for fluid-mud monitoring at a lab scale, besides possible utilization for large-scale monitoring field campaigns.