Testing floc settling velocity models in rivers and freshwater wetlands

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Abstract

Flocculation controls mud sedimentation and organic carbon burial rates by increasing mud settling velocity. However, calibration and validation of floc settling velocity models in freshwater are lacking. We used a camera, in situ laser diffraction particle sizing, and suspended sediment concentration-depth profiles to measure flocs in Wax Lake Delta, Louisiana. We developed a new workflow that combines our multiple floc data sources to distinguish between flocs and unflocculated sediment and measure floc attributes that were previously difficult to constrain. Sediment finer than g1/410 to 55 μm was flocculated with median floc diameter of 30 to 90 μm, bulk solid fraction of 0.05 to 0.3, fractal dimension of g1/42.1, and floc settling velocity of g1/40.1 to 1 mm s-1, with little variation along water depth. Results are consistent with a semi-empirical model indicating that sediment concentration and mineralogy, organics, water chemistry, and, above all, turbulence control floc settling velocity. Effective primary particle diameter is g1/42 μm, about 2 to 6 times smaller than the median primary particle diameter, and is better described using a fractal theory. Flow through the floc increases settling velocity by an average factor of 2 and up to a factor of 7 and can be described by a modified permeability model that accounts for the effect of many primary particle sizes on flow paths. These findings help explain discrepancies between observations and an explicit settling model based on Stokes' law that depends on floc diameter, permeability, and fractal properties.

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Nghiem, J. A., Li, G. K., Harringmeyer, J. P., Salter, G., Fichot, C. G., Cortese, L., & Lamb, M. P. (2024). Testing floc settling velocity models in rivers and freshwater wetlands. Earth Surface Dynamics, 12(6), 1267–1294. https://doi.org/10.5194/esurf-12-1267-2024

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