Effects of Bubble Plumes on Lake Dynamics, Near‐Bottom Turbulence, and Transfer of Dissolved Oxygen at the Sediment‐Water Interface

Author:

Wang Binbin1ORCID,Rezvani Maryam2ORCID,Bierlein Kevin A.3,Bryant Lee D.4,Little John C.5ORCID,Wüest Alfred67ORCID,Socolofsky Scott A.8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Missouri Columbia MO USA

2. Autodesk Walnut Creek CA USA

3. Hydros Consulting Inc. Boulder CO USA

4. Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering University of Bath Bath UK

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

6. Physics of Aquatic Systems Laboratory (APHYS)‐Margaretha Kamprad Chair École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

7. Aquatic Physics Department of Surface Waters – Research and Management Eawag Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology Kastanienbaum Switzerland

8. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Texas A&M University College Station TX USA

Abstract

AbstractWe quantify the lake dynamics, near‐bottom turbulence, flux of dissolved oxygen (DO) across the sediment‐water interface (SWI) and their interactions during oxygenation in two lakes. Field observations show that the lake dynamics were modified by the bubble plumes, showing enhanced mixing in the near‐field of the plumes. The interaction of the bubble‐induced flow with the internal density structure resulted in downwelling of warm water into the hypolimnion in the far‐field of the plumes. Within the bottom boundary layer (BBL), both lakes show weak oscillating flows primarily induced by seiching. The vertical profile of mean velocity within 0.4 m above the bed follows a logarithmic scaling. One lake shows a larger drag coefficient than those in stationary BBLs, where the classic law‐of‐the‐wall is valid. The injection of oxygen elevated the water column DO and hence, altered the DO flux across the SWI. The gas transfer velocity is driven by turbulence and is correlated with the bottom shear velocity. The thickness of the diffusive boundary layer was found to be consistent with the Batchelor length scale. The dynamics of the surface renewal time follow a log‐normal distribution, and the turbulent integral time scale is comparable to the surface renewal time. The analyses suggest that the effect of bubble plumes on the BBL turbulence is limited and that the canonical scales of turbulence emerge for the time‐average statistics, validating the turbulence scaling of gas transfer velocity in low‐energy lakes.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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