Vegetation is ubiquitous in rivers, estuaries, and wetlands, strongly influencing water conveyance and mass transport. The plant canopy affects mean and turbulent flow structure, and thus both advection and dispersion. Accurate prediction for the transport of nutrients, microbes, dissolved oxygen and other scalars depends on our ability to quantify the impact of vegetation. In this paper, we focus on longitudinal dispersion, which traditionally has been modeled in vegetated channels by drawing analogy to rough boundary layers. This approach is inappropriate in many cases, as the vegetation provides a significant dead zone, which may trap scalars and augment dispersion. The dead zone process is not captured in the rough boundary model. This ...
This paper summarizes recent advances in vegetation hydrodynamics and uses the new concepts to explo...
Vegetation in natural river interacts with river flow and sediment transport. This paper proposes a ...
The evaluation of longitudinal dispersion in aquatic canopies is necessary to predict the behavior ...
Vegetation is ubiquitous in rivers, estuaries and wetlands, strongly influencing both water conveyan...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, ...
Prediction of the physical transport and mixing of pollutants or other soluble material is crucial f...
The study of the transport processes in the riparian environment is currently a subject of great int...
Vegetation in channels strongly affects flow structure and turbulence, with consequences on the hydr...
Releasing and mixing of pollutants in rivers can cause serious threats for downstream users. Longitu...
The influence of rigid vegetation on the longitudinal dispersion coefficient in a compound open chan...
An awareness of mixing processes is imperative in understanding the transport of pollutants in open ...
Edwin A. Cowen,Lance CollinsThe presence of aquatic vegetation in streams becomes an important facto...
Understanding of how the vegetation distribution influences flow patterns and turbulence structure i...
The presence of vegetation in rivers exerts an important ecological function and is very important t...
Vegetation notably influences transport and mixing processes and can thus be used for controlling th...
This paper summarizes recent advances in vegetation hydrodynamics and uses the new concepts to explo...
Vegetation in natural river interacts with river flow and sediment transport. This paper proposes a ...
The evaluation of longitudinal dispersion in aquatic canopies is necessary to predict the behavior ...
Vegetation is ubiquitous in rivers, estuaries and wetlands, strongly influencing both water conveyan...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, ...
Prediction of the physical transport and mixing of pollutants or other soluble material is crucial f...
The study of the transport processes in the riparian environment is currently a subject of great int...
Vegetation in channels strongly affects flow structure and turbulence, with consequences on the hydr...
Releasing and mixing of pollutants in rivers can cause serious threats for downstream users. Longitu...
The influence of rigid vegetation on the longitudinal dispersion coefficient in a compound open chan...
An awareness of mixing processes is imperative in understanding the transport of pollutants in open ...
Edwin A. Cowen,Lance CollinsThe presence of aquatic vegetation in streams becomes an important facto...
Understanding of how the vegetation distribution influences flow patterns and turbulence structure i...
The presence of vegetation in rivers exerts an important ecological function and is very important t...
Vegetation notably influences transport and mixing processes and can thus be used for controlling th...
This paper summarizes recent advances in vegetation hydrodynamics and uses the new concepts to explo...
Vegetation in natural river interacts with river flow and sediment transport. This paper proposes a ...
The evaluation of longitudinal dispersion in aquatic canopies is necessary to predict the behavior ...