Permeable Sediment Porewater-Seawater Hydrodynamics

Coastal permeable (sandy) sediments are understood to be important bioreactors in the coastal and are of increasing interest to the coastal biogeochemistry community with important implications for nearshore ecology and water quality. Porewater collection and measurement techniques suitable for permeable sediments are relatively well developed whereas techniques for measuring chemical exchange (fluxes) across the sediment-water interface are currently limited, primarily because the techniques developed for fine-grained sediments cannot be used. EFDLab has participated in research in collaboration with researchers at the University of Hawaii, focused on developing methodology for measurement of transport of solutes into and out of permeable sediments.

Publications

J. P. Fram, G. R. Pawlak, F. J. Sansone, B. T. Glazer, and A. K. Hannides, “Miniature Thermistor Chain for Determining Surficial Sediment Porewater Advection”, Limnology and Oceanography Methods, submitted, July 2013.

A.B. Hebert, F. J. Sansone, G. Pawlak, "Tracer dispersal in sandy sediment porewater under enhanced physical forcing", Continental Shelf Research, 27, no. 17, p. 2278-2287, doi:10.1016/j.csr.2007.05.016, Oct. 2007

F.J. Sansone, G. Pawlak, T.P. Stanton, M.A. McManus, B.T. Glazer, E.H. DeCarlo, M. Bandet, J. Sevadjian, K. Stierhoff, C. Colgrove, A.B. Hebert, and I.C. Chen, "Kilo Nalu: Physical/Biogeochemical Dynamics Above and Within Permeable Sediments", Oceanography, 21, no. 4, Dec. 2008

G. Pawlak, E. De Carlo, J. Fram, A. Hebert, C. Jones, B. McLaughlin, M. McManus, K. Millikan, F. Sansone, T. Stanton & J. Wells, "Development, Deployment, and Operation of Kilo Nalu Nearshore Cabled Observatory", IEEE OCEANS 2009 Conference, Bremen, 2009