A Rational Method for the Design of Sand Dike/Dune Systems at Sheltered Sites; Wadden Sea Coast of Texel, The Netherlands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Rational Method for the Design of a Sand Dike/Dune in Sheltered Conditions
- (1)
- Residual dune zone; which is the residual dune volume Vdune,res above the design storm level that must remain present after an extreme design storm (with a return period in the range of 1000 to 10,000 years);
- (2)
- Dune storm zone between crest and toe; which is the storm erosion volume (Vdune,se) above the design storm level;
- (3)
- Dune base volume; which is the volume (Vdune,base) between the dune toe level and the design storm level and can be determined if the dune crest width, the dune front and back slopes and the dune toe level are known;
- (4)
- Dune wear zone/volume; which is the additional (extra) volume (Vdune,wear) in the dune zone that should be present above the dune toe level to account for all erosion losses during a reasonable inspection/maintenance period (roughly 10 to 20 years);
- (5)
- Beach wear zone/volume; which is the additional (extra) volume (Vbeach,wear) in the beach zone between the beach toe level and the dune toe level to account for erosional beach losses during a reasonable maintenance period (roughly 5 to 10 years);
- (6)
- Dune-beach core zone; which is the volume (Vcore) enclosed by the beach profile, the dune toe level and the original sea bottom.
2.1. Dune Zone
2.2. Beach Zone
- (1)
- Prescribed design conditions (design water level; wave height, storm duration);
- (2)
- Minimum crest level of dune (at 2.5 m above design storm level);
- (3)
- Application of an Xbeach-model with prescribed model settings for computation of dune erosion volume during design conditions;
- (4)
- Extra dune erosion volume related to uncertainty effects (+25%) and to longshore transport gradients (10%);
- (5)
- Total dune wear volume of 200.000 m3 (about 60 m3/m) and beach wear volume of 200.000 m3 (about 60 m3/m) for the new sand dike;
- (6)
- Median sand diameter (d50) of beach wear layer larger than 0.2 mm;
- (7)
- Cross-shore profile should be dynamically stable for annual wave conditions;
- (8)
- Maintenance should be minimum for a period of 10 years.
- (1)
- (2)
- (3)
- Littoral: model for the prediction of longshore sand transport [30];
- (4)
- Duros+: semi-empirical model for the prediction of dune erosion during extreme storm events with prescibed water level including tide [31];
- (5)
- Dune-rule: semi-empirical model for the prediction of dune erosion in storm conditions with prescribed water level including tide; the dune rule-model is a parameterization-model based on Crosmor-model results [18];
- (6)
- (7)
- Delft3d: non-linear shallow water model, coupled with Swan-model, used to assess the tidal water levels and tidal currents;
- (8)
- Swan: a third-generation wave model, used to determine the typical nearshore wave climate on this specific project location.
3. Project Location, Environmental and Design Conditions
4. Cross-Shore Transport and Associated Erosion/Accretion
4.1. General
4.2. Beach Stability under Daily Waves
- (1)
- seaward of −1.5 m NAP: 90% sand of 0.2 mm and 10% sand of 0.5 mm;
- (2)
- landward of −1.5 m NAP: 10% sand of 0.2 mm and 90% sand of 0.5 mm.
4.3. Beach Stability Under Decadal Storm Waves
- (1)
- storm; 1 per 5 years: Hs = 1.5 m, Tp = 5 s, storm surge level = 2.3 m; duration = 3 days;
- (2)
- storm; 1 per 10 years: Hs = 1.8 m, Tp = 6 s, storm surge level = 2.8 m; duration = 3 days;
- (3)
- storm; 1 per 100 years: Hs = 2.0 m, Tp = 6 s, storm surge level = 3.5 m; duration = 3 days.
4.4. Dune Erosion under Extreme Storm Waves
- (1)
- lower beach slope of 1 to 50; dune front with slope of 1 to 3; dune crest at +8 m NAP;
- (2)
- median grain size = 0.2, 0.3 and 0.4 mm;
- (3)
- design storm level op +4.7 m NAP; design wave height = 2.5 m; peak wave period = 6.9 s;
- (4)
- angle of wave attack of about 0°;
- (5)
- storm duration 45 h.
5. Longshore Transport and Associated Erosion/Accretion
5.1. General
5.2. Equilibrium Longshore Transport at Transects 15 and 30
5.3. Longshore Transport Based on Xbeach2dh
5.4. Erosion due to Longshore Transport Gradients in Beach Zone
- (1)
- small variations of local parameters (sand particle diameter, beach slope, beach shape, wave parameters);
- (2)
- gradual increase/decrease of longshore currents, waves and transport due to presence of structures (groins) and/or changes in coastline angle (curved coasts).
5.5. Erosion due to Longshore Transport Gradients in Dune Zone
6. Aeolian Transport and Erosion
- (1)
- measured wind transport of dry sand at the beach of Terschelling with parallel wind;
- (2)
- measured wind transport at Ceres beach north of the project site of the new sand dike.
7. Design of Sand Dike/Dune System
- (1)
- A beach surface with a lower slope of 1 to 50 and an upper slope of 1 to 20 consisting of 0.25 to 0.3 mm-sand.
- (2)
- The dune above +3 m NAP (toe level) with a front slope of 1 to 3 and the crest at +8 m NAP.
- (3)
- The residual dune with a crest height of 2.5 m above design level of +4.7 m NAP, a crest width of 3 m at design level at 4.7 m NAP and a crest width of 0.6 m at +8 m NAP for front slope of 1 to 1 and a back slope of 1 to 2; the volume Vdune,res = Wres (hcrest − hstorm) + 0.5(hcrest − hstorm)2(1/tanαfront + 1/tanαback) = 0.6 × 3.3 + 0.5 × 3.32 (1/1 + 1/0.5) ≅ 20 m3/m above design level./
- (4)
- A dune volume (Vdune,se) related to design storm erosion; Vdune,se = A + T, with A = dune erosion volume above the design water level (about 50 m3/m, see Table 3), T = extra volume to account for uncertainties = (γcross + γlong)A ≅ 20 m3/m with uncertainty coefficients γcross = 0.25 and γlong = 0.1 as prescribed by authority HHNK, yielding Vdune,se = 50 + 20 = 70 m3/m; the T-volume includes the erosion volume related to longshore transport gradients due to local variations during the storm event (about 5 m3/m, see Section 5.5, which is 10% of the A-volume).
- (5)
- The crest width of the dune erosion volume above the design storm level can be computed from the volume: Wdune(hcrest − hstorm) + 0.5(hcrest − hstorm)2(1/tanαfront − 1/tanαback) = Vdune,se yielding Wdune = 18 m for Vdune,se = 70 m3/m and front slope of 1 to 3 and residual dune slope of 1 to 1.
- (6)
- The dune base volume between the dune toe level (+3 m NAP) and the design storm level (+4.7 m NAP) can be determined from geometrics resulting in Vdune,base ≅ 65 m3/m.
- (7)
- An additional dune wear volume; Vdune,wear = supplement volume of about 55 m3/m with crest width of about 11.3 m (prescribed by local authority); this volume is for compensation of erosion losses due to wind-blown sand (maximum 3 m3/m/year, Section 6), and erosion due to storms with return periods between 10 and 100 years (about 20 m3/m, Table 3) giving a maintenance period of 10 to 15 years.
- (8)
- A beach wear layer of coarse sand (0.4 mm) on top of the beach surface; the beach wear volume can be derived from the erosion due to cross-shore and longshore processes; the erosion due to cross-shore transport gradients is in the range of 2 to 7 m3/m/year (Table 3); the erosion due to longshore transport gradients is in the range of 1 to 6 m3/m/year (Table 6) for daily waves including minor storms; based on this, the beach wear volume for five years is about 5 × (2 + 1) = 15 m3 for transect 10, 5 × (3.5 + 3.5) = 35 m3 for transect 20 and 5 × (7 + 6) = 65 m3/m for transect 30.
8. Conclusions
- (1)
- The cross-shore beach erosion along a mildly sloping beach profile (1 to 50 lower and 1 to 20 upper beach) consisting of 0.4 mm sand is minimal for daily waves up to 1 m.
- (2)
- The cross-shore beach erosion of 0.4 mm sand due to minor seasonal storms on the time scale of the maintenance interval (5 years) is about 10 to 20 m3/m; a beach wear layer of coarse sand (0.4 mm) should be placed as compensation for erosion during the maintenance return period (5 to 10 years).
- (3)
- The dune front above the +3 m NAP line is hardly affected by storms with a return period of less than 10 years; the dune front recession is significant (about 7 m) for the 100 years-storm.
- (4)
- The dune front erosion for an extreme storm event with return period of 4000 years is about 50 m3/m for 0.25 mm-sand based on results from four models with model variation of ±5 m3/m (10% variation with respect to the mean).
- (5)
- The dune front erosion can be 60% larger for the most unfavorable set of input conditions; the uncertainty related to random variation of the input conditions is about ±30%.
- (6)
- The maximum net annual longshore transport based on numerical models and empirical equilibrium equations was found to be of the order of 5000 to 10,000 m3/m/year for 0.4 mm-sand; the numerical model results (Xbeach2dh; about 6500 m3/year) are most reliable because the wave sheltering and the gradual development of the longshore current along the relatively short sand dike are much better taken into account.
- (7)
- The maximum longshore transport gradient in the beach zone with 0.4 mm-sand related to local variations of grain size, beach slope, beach shape and wave parameters (height, incidence angle) is found to be of the order of 5 m3/m/year.
- (8)
- The maximum longshore transport gradient in the dune zone with 0.25 mm-sand during an extreme storm event (with return period of 4000 years) related to local variations of grain size, beach slope, beach shape and wave parameters (height, incidence angle) is found to be of the order of 5 m3/m during a storm of 45 hours, which is about 10% of the cross-shore dune erosion volume due to an extreme storm event.
- (9)
- The maximum net annual erosion in the beach and dune zones with 0.25 mm-sand due to aeolian sand transport in cross-shore direction is estimated to be about 3 m3/m/year.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Significant Wave Height (m) | Wave Sectors | Total | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AC = 30° AG = 210° | 60° 240° | 90° 270° | 120° 300° | 150° 330° | 180° 360° | 210° 30° | 240° 60° | 240°–30° 90°–240° (Offland) | ||
<0.2 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 9.6 | 25.7 | 35.3 |
0.2–0.4 | 4.5 | 4.4 | 4.9 | 3.6 | 3.2 | 3.9 | 4.4 | - | 5.7 | 34.6 |
0.4–0.6 | 1.1 | 2.7 | - | - | 1.7 | 2.3 | 7.5 | 8.3 | - | 23.6 |
0.6–1.0 | - | - | 2.3 | 1.3 | - | - | - | - | - | 3.6 |
1.0–1.4 | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1.2 | 1.3 | 0.4 | 2.9 |
Total | 5.6 | 7.1 | 7.2 | 4.9 | 4.9 | 6.2 | 13.1 | 19.2 | 31.8 | 100% |
Transect | Water Level to NAP (m) | Significant Wave Height at Depth of 20 m (m) | Peak Wave Period (s) |
---|---|---|---|
0–16 | 4.7 | 2.5 | 6.9 |
17–23 | 4.7 | 3.2 | 6.9 |
23–34 | 4.7 | 3.4 | 7.5 |
Case | Erosion (m3/m/year) | |
---|---|---|
Crosmor Transect 15 | Xbeach2dh Transect 10, 15, 30 | |
Storm waves with return period of 5 years | Beach zone: 2 | not applied |
Storm waves with return period of 10 years | Beach zone: 2 | 5; 7; 10 |
Storm waves with return period of 100 years | Beach zone: 2 | not applied |
Dune zone: 4 | not applied |
Parameter | Erosion Volume above Storm Surge Level (m3/m) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Xbeach1d | Crosmor | Duros+ | Dune-Rule | |
Transect 15 | 45 | 55 | 45 | 55 |
Transect 30 | 55 | 65 | 55 | 65 |
Case | Net Annual Longshore Transport (m3/year) | |
---|---|---|
Littoral Transects 15, 30 | Xbeach2dh Transects 15, 30 | |
Daily wave conditions including minor storms | 10000; 13000 | 2000; 6500 |
Case | Longshore Transport Gradients (m3/m/year) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Littoral | Xbeach2dh | |||||
Transect 5–10 | Transect 10–20 | Transect 20–30 | Transect 5–10 | Transect 10–20 | Transect 20–30 | |
Variations of local parameters due to daily wave conditions | 2 | 5 | 6 | <1 | 1 | 3 |
Gradual increase/decrease of longshore transport processes due to presence of structures and/or changes of coastline line angle (daily wave conditions) | 0 | 6 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 0 |
Case | Total Annual Sediment Transport (m3/m/year) | Shore Parallel (m3/m/year) to NE to SW | Shore Normal (m3/m/year) to NW to SE | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dry without vegetation | 65 | 48 | −8 | 9 | −6 |
Wet without vegetation | 35 | 27 | −6 | 6 | −3 |
Wet with vegetation | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
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Perk, L.; van Rijn, L.; Koudstaal, K.; Fordeyn, J. A Rational Method for the Design of Sand Dike/Dune Systems at Sheltered Sites; Wadden Sea Coast of Texel, The Netherlands. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2019, 7, 324. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7090324
Perk L, van Rijn L, Koudstaal K, Fordeyn J. A Rational Method for the Design of Sand Dike/Dune Systems at Sheltered Sites; Wadden Sea Coast of Texel, The Netherlands. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2019; 7(9):324. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7090324
Chicago/Turabian StylePerk, Luitze, Leo van Rijn, Kimberley Koudstaal, and Jan Fordeyn. 2019. "A Rational Method for the Design of Sand Dike/Dune Systems at Sheltered Sites; Wadden Sea Coast of Texel, The Netherlands" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 7, no. 9: 324. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7090324
APA StylePerk, L., van Rijn, L., Koudstaal, K., & Fordeyn, J. (2019). A Rational Method for the Design of Sand Dike/Dune Systems at Sheltered Sites; Wadden Sea Coast of Texel, The Netherlands. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 7(9), 324. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7090324