Publication | Open Access
Mixed convection and density‐dependent seawater circulation in coastal aquifers
170
Citations
36
References
2004
Year
Ocean DynamicsEngineeringCoastal WaterOceanographyCoastal HydrodynamicsHydrogeologic SystemGeophysical FlowEarth ScienceFluid PropertiesBackward DispersionHydrometeorologyHydrogeologyBoundary ConditionSubsurface HydrologyHydromechanicsHydrologySeabed BoundaryCivil EngineeringDensity‐dependent Seawater Circulation
Density‐dependent circulation of seawater in coastal aquifers results in submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) across the seabed that is a mixture of terrestrial groundwater and former marine water. In this study, the controls of the relative amount of seawater to freshwater in SGD were investigated numerically using the FEFLOW and SUTRA codes. It was found that the key controls could be expressed in the form of a single nondimensional recirculation number that incorporates the combined effects of free convection, forced convection, and hydrodynamic dispersion on convective overturn within the coastal salt wedge. Anisotropy effects were incorporated into the recirculation number with limited success based on the principle of equivalent isotropic hydraulic conductivity. The type of boundary condition employed along the seabed was shown to be important. Convective overturn was substantially increased if backward dispersion of salt into the aquifer from along the outflowing portion of the seabed boundary was prevented. Overall, the results demonstrated a strong dependence of convective overturn on the aquifer dispersivities, suggesting that results from numerical simulations are problematic to apply to real aquifer systems that typically exhibit uncertain, scale‐dependent dispersion properties.
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