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

Conference Paper (2021)
Author(s)

I Fadel (University of Twente)

O.J. 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)

Research Group
Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineering
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.202120168
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Research Group
Rivers, Ports, Waterways and Dredging Engineering
ISBN (electronic)
9789462823860

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.

No files available

Metadata only record. There are no files for this record.