Coarse sediment dynamics and low-head dams: Monitoring instantaneous bedload transport using a stationary RFID antenna

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113671Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Bedload transport over a low-head dam was assessed using sediment traps and a stationary RFID antenna positioned along a weir crest.

  • Tracers as large as the D70 (90 mm) were observed passing over the weir.

  • Critical flow conditions for particle export indicated size-selective transport.

  • Presented are a number of possible conceptual models that may offer a basis for understanding temporary storage dynamics.

Abstract

Coarse sediment transport in fluvial systems serves an important role in determining in-stream physical habitat, spawning potential and benthic community structure. However, despite more than a decade of pressure in Europe to restore stream continuity under the Water Framework Directive (WFD), there have been relatively few empirical studies on how low-head, run-of-river structures (i.e., weirs) disrupt the processes and dynamics of bedload conveyance. In this study we present an investigation into how coarse sediment is transferred through a low-head dam via the real-time monitoring of bedload transport over a weir in southeast Ireland. Critical discharge values for particle entrainment over the structure were derived from the novel use of a stationary RFID antenna, coupled with continuous recording of water levels and sediment captured downstream using pit-style sediment traps. The stationary RFID antenna was installed along a weir crest using both ‘pass-under’ and ‘pass-over’ configurations as a means of detecting the moment bedload tracers moved over the dam crest. Results show that 10% of tracers deployed upstream were detected passing over the weir, while a further 15% that were not detected were recovered downstream. These results indicate bedload material as large as the upstream D70 (i.e., 90 mm) can move over the structure during infrequent high-flow events. However, thorough searches of the seeded area upstream of the dam also suggest that as many as 43% of the total number may have passed downstream, indicating that tracers moved over the weir after the antenna was damaged during a high-flow event, or were missed due to either particle velocity or signal collision. In addition, 30 of the tracers that remained upstream were shown to have either been buried due to the subsequent influx of sediment entering the reservoir, or were reworked though the surface material. Critical discharge values indicate size-selective transport patterns may dominate and a strong correlation between event peak discharge and total bedload captured downstream. These findings provide more evidence that low-head structures may eventually adopt a morphology that allows for the intermittent storage and later export of a channel's bedload downstream as hypothesized by other authors. Building upon these findings and those of other recent field studies, we present a set of possible schematic models that offer a basis for understanding the unique ways low-head dams can continue to disrupt sediment conveyance long after they have reached their functional storage capacity. The limitations of using a stationary RFID antenna and possible recommendations for future studies are discussed.

Keywords

Critical discharge
Entrainment
Rivers
Run-of-river dam
RFID tracers
Weir

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