Unraveling Interactions between Asymmetric Tidal Turbulence, Residual Circulation, and Salinity Dynamics in Short, Periodically Weakly Stratified Estuaries

Xiaoyan Wei National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool, United Kingdom

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Henk M. Schuttelaars Delft Institute of Applied Mathematics, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands

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Megan E. Williams Departamento de Obras Civiles, Universidad Tecnica Federico Santa Maria, Valparaiso, Chile
National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool, United Kingdom

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Jennifer M. Brown National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool, United Kingdom

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Peter D. Thorne National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool, United Kingdom

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Laurent O. Amoudry National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool, United Kingdom

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Abstract

Asymmetric tidal turbulence (ATT) strongly influences estuarine health and functioning. However, its impact on the three-dimensional estuarine dynamics and the feedback of water motion and salinity distribution on ATT remain poorly understood, especially for short estuaries (estuarine length ≪ tidal wavelength). This study systematically investigates the abovementioned interactions in a short estuary for the first time, considering periodically weakly stratified conditions. This is done by developing a three-dimensional semi-analytical model (combining perturbation method with finite element method) that allows a dissection of the contributions of different processes to ATT, estuarine circulation, and salt transport. The generation of ATT is dominated by (i) strain-induced periodic stratification and (ii) asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence, and their contributions to ATT are different both in amplitude and phase. The magnitude of the residual circulation related to ATT and the eddy viscosity–shear covariance (ESCO) is about half of that of the gravitational circulation (GC) and shows a “reversed” pattern as compared to GC. ATT generated by strain-induced periodic stratification contributes to an ESCO circulation with a spatial structure similar to GC. This circulation reduces the longitudinal salinity gradients and thus weakens GC. Contrastingly, the ESCO circulation due to asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence shows patterns opposite to GC and acts to enhance GC. Concerning the salinity dynamics at steady state, GC and tidal pumping are equally important to salt import, whereas ESCO circulation yields a significant seaward salt transport. These findings highlight the importance of identifying the sources of ATT to understand its impact on estuarine circulation and salt distribution.

Denotes content that is immediately available upon publication as open access.

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

© 2021 American Meteorological Society.

Corresponding author: Xiaoyan Wei, xwei@noc.ac.uk

Abstract

Asymmetric tidal turbulence (ATT) strongly influences estuarine health and functioning. However, its impact on the three-dimensional estuarine dynamics and the feedback of water motion and salinity distribution on ATT remain poorly understood, especially for short estuaries (estuarine length ≪ tidal wavelength). This study systematically investigates the abovementioned interactions in a short estuary for the first time, considering periodically weakly stratified conditions. This is done by developing a three-dimensional semi-analytical model (combining perturbation method with finite element method) that allows a dissection of the contributions of different processes to ATT, estuarine circulation, and salt transport. The generation of ATT is dominated by (i) strain-induced periodic stratification and (ii) asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence, and their contributions to ATT are different both in amplitude and phase. The magnitude of the residual circulation related to ATT and the eddy viscosity–shear covariance (ESCO) is about half of that of the gravitational circulation (GC) and shows a “reversed” pattern as compared to GC. ATT generated by strain-induced periodic stratification contributes to an ESCO circulation with a spatial structure similar to GC. This circulation reduces the longitudinal salinity gradients and thus weakens GC. Contrastingly, the ESCO circulation due to asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence shows patterns opposite to GC and acts to enhance GC. Concerning the salinity dynamics at steady state, GC and tidal pumping are equally important to salt import, whereas ESCO circulation yields a significant seaward salt transport. These findings highlight the importance of identifying the sources of ATT to understand its impact on estuarine circulation and salt distribution.

Denotes content that is immediately available upon publication as open access.

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

© 2021 American Meteorological Society.

Corresponding author: Xiaoyan Wei, xwei@noc.ac.uk

1. Introduction

Vertical turbulent fluxes of momentum and salt are of fundamental importance to estuarine water motion and mass transport, hence strongly influencing the estuarine morphology, biology, and ecology. There fluxes are usually parameterized by means of a downgradient approach using a vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity (based on Fick’s law). Due to strong temporal variability of small-scale turbulence, the vertical eddy viscosity can change significantly in time (see, e.g., Peters 1997, 1999). Of particular interest in the present paper are the variations of vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity at the dominant tidal frequency and their interactions with the water motion and salt transport. The dominant tidal component of these coefficients parameterizes variations of small-scale turbulence during the tidal cycle and is responsible for flood–ebb asymmetry in small-scale turbulence. Such asymmetries were first observed by Simpson et al. (1990) and will be called asymmetric tidal turbulence (ATT) hereafter.

Observations have highlighted the importance of ATT to estuarine circulation in many systems (Jay and Musiak 1994; Stacey et al. 2001; Scully and Friedrichs 2003, 2007). Nevertheless, different flood–ebb asymmetries of turbulence were observed across different marine systems, implying the source of ATT and its impact on water motion and mass transport can also vary significantly. In the lower Hudson River estuary, Liverpool Bay, and the Dee estuary, for example, higher turbulence levels were observed during flood than ebb (Geyer et al. 2000; Simpson et al. 2002; Bolaños et al. 2013). In the Gironde estuary, higher turbulence levels were observed during ebb under neap conditions. However, during spring tides, turbulence was higher during flood (Ross et al. 2019).

These different ATT patterns are associated with many processes. Higher turbulence levels during the flood tide are usually attributed to strain-induced periodic stratification (SIPS; Simpson et al. 1990, 2002, 2005; Stacey and Ralston 2005; Cheng et al. 2010), flood-dominant bottom-shear-generated turbulence (BGT; see, e.g., West and Shiono 1988; Li and Zhong 2009), and convective instabilities (Rippeth et al. 2001; Prandle 2004; Stacey and Ralston 2005). In contrast, stronger turbulence during ebb is attributed to shear instability (Geyer 1995), ebb-dominant BGT (Simons et al. 2010; Ross et al. 2019), and lateral processes (Scully and Geyer 2012; Basdurak et al. 2017). In addition, the tidally varying water depth (TWD) effectively influences the development of turbulence in shallow waters by limiting the maximum eddy size (Uijttewaal and Booij 2000), and may also result in a nonnegligible contribution to the ATT in shallow, meso/macrotidal estuaries.

The contribution of ATT to estuarine circulation originates from the eddy viscosity–shear covariance (ESCO), hence will be called ESCO circulation, as proposed by Dijkstra et al. (2017). Many process-based models have been employed to understand and quantify the contribution of this circulation. Stacey et al. (2008) found the ESCO circulation can be more significant than gravitational circulation (GC) under moderate water depths and stratification, and the phasing of ATT relative to the shear determines whether the ESCO circulation has a similar or opposite vertical structure to GC. These results were confirmed by Cheng et al. (2010) with a width-averaged analytical model as well as a three-dimensional numerical model (considering weakly stratified narrow estuaries with a constant water depth). The relative importance of ESCO circulation to estuarine circulation was first quantified by Burchard and Hetland (2010). Using a one-dimensional water column model coupled to a turbulence closure model, they found that in periodically stratified estuaries ESCO circulation is about twice as important as GC, and the significance of the ESCO circulation decreases with increasing down-estuary wind straining and residual runoff. They also found the ESCO circulation has a vertical structure similar to GC but the structure is “reversed” when considering strong down-estuary wind straining. Extending Burchard and Hetland’s (2010) model to a (two-dimensional) cross-sectional model, Burchard et al. (2011) found strong dependence of the relative importance of ESCO circulation on the Simpson number Si (ratio of horizontal buoyancy gradient to bottom frictional velocity scale). For large Si, GC is stronger than ESCO circulation; for small Si, ESCO circulation dominates the estuarine circulation. Following the same framework, Burchard and Schuttelaars (2012) found that the lateral advection of longitudinal momentum significantly influences ESCO circulation in estuaries with a parabolic cross section. Their results highlight the importance of lateral processes to the along-channel estuarine circulation, as found by Lerczak and Geyer (2004) using a three-dimensional (3D) numerical model. Using the same approach of Burchard and Hetland (2010), Dijkstra et al. (2017) found that ESCO directly influences estuarine circulation through not only the covariance between tidal shear and tidal variations of vertical eddy viscosity, but also the covariance between shear and eddy viscosity at twice the dominant tidal frequency. Moreover, the tidally varying eddy viscosity can interact with GC and indirectly contribute to ESCO circulation. By employing a numerical width-averaged model, they further demonstrated significant variations of the relative importance of GC, and the direct and indirect ESCO circulation components along the Scheldt estuary.

However, as longitudinal salinity gradients need to be prescribed in water-column and cross-sectional models and lateral processes are neglected in width-averaged models, the 3D interactions between ATT and salinity gradients remain poorly understood, as well as their influence on the gravitational and ESCO circulation. Moreover, most three-dimensional and width-averaged modeling studies have focused on long estuaries, in which the estuarine length and tidal wavelength are within the same order of magnitude. The importance of asymmetric tidal turbulence to estuarine circulation and salt transport in short estuaries (estuarine length ≪ tidal wavelength) is yet to be evaluated.

One major difference between short estuaries and long estuaries lies in the tidal propagation. The tide behaves mostly as a standing wave (with some features of a progressive wave) in short estuaries and a progressive wave in long estuaries (Dronkers 1986). This has direct consequences for estuarine circulation and salt transport. For example, the residual circulation due to tidal return flow (that compensates the Stokes drift) is close to zero in very short tidal basins as a result of weak correlations between the tidal surface elevation and surface velocities. In long estuaries, however, tidal return flow can generate strong seaward residual flow (Dronkers 1986). Moreover, the residual salt flux due to tidal advection of salinity (i.e., tidal pumping) dominates the landward salt transport in long estuaries (Wei et al. 2017), but is close to zero in very short estuaries due to weak correlations between the tidal velocity and salinity (Schettini et al. 2017). Another important distinction is linked to the along-channel salinity gradients, which are usually large in short estuaries (such as the Tamar, Tees, and Wyre estuaries in the United Kingdom) compared to long estuaries (Lewis and Uncles 2003) and can lead to stronger gravitational circulation in shorter estuaries (with large Si number). This implies that our knowledge of dominant processes for estuarine circulation and salt transport established for long estuaries may not hold for short estuaries.

Hence, there are three main goals in this study: 1) to develop a semi-analytical model that allows for a three-dimensional investigation of the mutually interacting water motion, salinity distribution, and small-scale turbulence, focusing on ATT in tidally dominated, periodically weakly stratified estuaries; 2) to systematically quantify the individual contributions of asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence, strain-induced periodic stratification, and water depth variations to ATT, estuarine circulation, and salt transport in a short estuary; and 3) to investigate the feedback of water motion and salt transport on ATT. The solution method employed in this study also allows for a systematic interpretation framework for the complex variations of turbulence commonly observed in numerical models and field measurements.

This paper is organized as follows: the research method is described in section 2; in section 3, the contributions of strain-induced turbulence, asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence, and water depth variations to the asymmetric tidal turbulence, and the mutual interactions between asymmetric tidal turbulence, currents, and salinity distribution are investigated; section 4 briefly discusses the model capabilities and limitations; and conclusions are presented in section 5.

2. Research method

a. Model description

The estuarine dynamics considered here is strongly nonlinear due to interactions between turbulence, shear, and stratification: small-scale turbulence can strongly influence the water motion and salinity distribution; meanwhile, the shear acts to generate turbulence, which is inhibited by stable stratification and promoted by unstable stratification. To resolve the estuarine dynamics in a way that allows for a systematic decomposition of the abovementioned interactions, the 3D semi-analytical model of Wei et al. (2017) is extended in this study. In Wei et al. (2017), the nonlinearly coupled water motion and salt dynamics are resolved, decomposing temporal variations into a semidiurnal (M2) tidal constituent and a residual (M0) signal both for the water motion and salinity. In this model, a time-independent vertical eddy viscosity Aυ and diffusivity Kυ are prescribed, thus neglecting the influence of temporal variations of Aυ and Kυ on the hydro- and salt dynamics. To dynamically include this temporal variability which is directly linked to the asymmetric tidal turbulence (ATT), three main extensions are made. First, Aυ and Kυ are dynamically coupled to the water motion and stratification, resulting in a tidally varying Aυ and Kυ. Second, the contribution of this temporal variability of Aυ and Kυ to estuarine circulation (ESCO) and salt transport are taken into account. Third, the quarter-diurnal (M4) tidal motion [see Eq. (9)] is resolved because it plays a nonnegligible role in the generation of ATT and is partly originated from the covariance of eddy viscosity and shear at the semidiurnal frequency.

1) Extending the 3D semi-analytical model

(i) Governing equations and boundary conditions
The model considers an idealized, periodically weakly stratified estuary with a simplified bathymetry and geometry (see Fig. 1). The water motion is described by the three-dimensional shallow water equations under the Boussinesq approximation and the hydrostatic assumption, neglecting effects of horizontal eddy viscosity. The hydrodynamic equations read
ux+υy+wz=0,
ut+(Uu)=fυgηxgρczηρxdz+z(Aυuz),
υt+(Uυ)=fugηygρczηρydz+z(Aυυz),
and the salinity equation is given by
St+(US)=x(KhSx)+y(KhSy)+z(KυSz).
Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.

Sketch of the idealized estuary. Here x and y are the horizontal coordinates, and z is the vertical coordinate, positive in the upward direction. The free surface elevation and the bottom are located at z = η and z = −H(x, y), respectively. The undisturbed water level is at z = 0. Source: Wei et al. (2017).

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

Here t denotes time, η is the free surface elevation, and U = (u, υ, w) is the velocity vector, with u, υ, and w the velocity components in x, y, and z directions, respectively. The acceleration due to gravity is denoted by g. The Coriolis parameter is given by f. The estuarine water density is represented by ρ, which is assumed to depend only on salinity S as ρ = ρc(1 + βsS), with βs = 7.6 × 10−4 psu−1 and a constant background density ρc = 1000 kg m−3. The term Kh is the horizontal eddy diffusivity.

At the seaward boundary, the water motion is forced by a prescribed, laterally homogeneous sea surface elevation that consists of a semidiurnal tidal constituent, M2, its first overtide, M4, and a residual sea surface elevation, M0, with the width-averaged residual sea surface amplitude equal to zero. A freshwater discharge Q is prescribed at the landward boundary, x = L, where a weir is located. The closed boundaries are impermeable, and the normal component of the depth-integrated water flux is zero at these boundaries. By requiring depth-averaged water flux to vanish at the closed boundaries (instead of a no-slip condition), the dynamics within regions close to these boundaries, where horizontal stresses play an important role in the momentum balance, is not resolved in this model. At the free surface, kinematic and no stress boundary conditions are prescribed. The bottom is impermeable and a partial slip condition is applied, assuming linearized bottom shear stress as first proposed by Lorentz (1926):
Aυ(u,υ)/z=s(u,υ),
with s the partial slip parameter. The partial slip parameter is chosen such that the energy dissipation per tidal cycle equals the dissipation obtained with a quadratic bottom friction. The partial slip bottom boundary condition is applied at the top of the logarithmic boundary layer, as described in Zitman and Schuttelaars (2012). The linearized bottom friction assumption is essential to directly solving the water motion at each tidal frequency and dissecting the contributions of different processes to residual circulation and salt transport in this model. To close the salinity problem, a spatially uniform tidally averaged salinity Sm is prescribed at the mouth. The salt flux through the free surface and bottom, and the depth-integrated tidally averaged salt transport normal to the closed boundaries are equal to zero.
(ii) Semi-analytical approach

A semi-analytical approach is taken to solve the water motion, salinity, and vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity, combining a perturbation method with a finite element method and assuming all these variables to consist of different tidal constituents. As the first step of the perturbation method, the system of equations is reduced to an ordered system of equations by making the equations dimensionless and comparing each term with a small parameter ε ≪ 1, the ratio of the semidiurnal tidal surface amplitude to the undisturbed water depth at the mouth. This results in a system of equations at each order of ε, which describes the water motion and salinity at specific tidal frequencies (appendixes AD). The equations at each order can be solved separately. When using a vertically uniform tidally averaged vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity, the perturbation method allows the vertical shape functions of all physical variables at each tidal frequency to be obtained analytically from the top of the logarithmic layer to the undisturbed water level. Then, the horizontal distribution of all physical variables is solved using a finite element method.

The decomposition of the water motion and salinity in tidal constituents is included below for clarity. As given by Wei et al. (2017, 2018), for tidally dominated estuaries, the water motion is composed of a leading-order M2 tidal constituent, and a first-order M0 and M4 component [neglecting terms of O(ε2) and higher],
η=ηM2O(1)+ηM0+ηM4O(ε),
U=UM2O(1)+UM0+UM4O(ε).
Here, ηM2 and UM2 are respectively the leading-order tidal elevation and velocity at the M2 tidal frequency, ηM4 and UM4 are the first-order tidal elevation and velocity at the M4 tidal frequency, and ηM0 and UM0 are the subtidal elevation and flow velocity. The residual circulation can be separated into various contributions:
UM0=UM0RD+UM0TRFSD+UM0NS+UM0AC+UM0GC+UM0ESCO.
These include the subtidal flow induced by river discharge (UM0RD), tidal return flow that compensates the Stokes drift (UM0TRFSD), no-shear condition at the free surface (UM0NS), tidal rectification of the M2 tide (i.e., advection, UM0AC), gravitational circulation (UM0GC), and eddy viscosity–shear covariance (UM0ESCO). Similarly, the M4 tidal flow can be decomposed into contributions by tidal return flow (UM4TRFSD), no-shear surface condition (UM4NS), advection (UM4AC), eddy viscosity–shear covariance (UM4ESCO), and the externally forced M4 tide (UM4EF),
UM4=UM4TRFSD+UM4NS+UM4AC+UM4ESCO+UM4EF.
Under weakly stratified conditions, salinity primarily consists of a leading-order M0 component, SM0, that is vertically homogeneous and time independent, and a first-order M2 component, SM2, with a vertical structure,
S=SM0(x,y)O(1)+SM2(t,x,y,z)O(ε).
Turbulence in estuaries dominated by a semidiurnal tide consists of components at various tidal frequencies (e.g., M0, M2, M4, M6) due to generation of overtides. Focusing on the ATT, this study considers only the residual component of the vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity (i.e., AυM0, KυM0), that are time independent, and the semidiurnal component (i.e., AυM2, KυM2), that depends on the instantaneous water motion and stratification [see section 2a(3)]. In this study, AυM0 and KυM0 are assumed to be depth independent, and a unity Prandtl–Schmidt number is considered for simplicity. Consequences of making these assumptions are discussed in section 4. Following Cheng et al. (2010), the semidiurnal component is assumed to be one order of magnitude smaller than the residual component,
Aυ=Kυ=AυM0(x,y)O(1)+AυM2(t,x,y,z)O(ε).

Note that the temporal correlations between AυM2 and the semidiurnal tidal shear contribute to both the residual circulation and quarter-diurnal tide, i.e., UM0ESCO and UM4ESCO [see section 2a(2)]. The residual ESCO circulation yields an important contribution to redistributing salinity. However, since SM2 is an order of magnitude lower than SM0 in periodically weakly stratified estuaries (see, e.g., Bolaños et al. 2013), the temporal correlations between KυM2 (equal to AυM2) and vertical gradient of SM2 have no impact on the residual salinity distribution [see Eq. (C1) in appendix C].

2) The ESCO flow

The full system of equations for the first-order water motion is linear due to the linearized bottom friction (details in appendix B). Hence, the ESCO flow can be obtained by considering only the forcings associated with the temporal correlations between AυM2 and the M2 vertical shear:
uMjESCOx+υMjESCOy+wMjESCOz=0,
gηMjESCOx=fυMjESCO+z(AυM0uMjESCOz+AυM2uM2z¯),
gηMjESCOy=fuMjESCO+z(AυM0υMjESCOz+AυM2υM2z¯).

Here ηMjESCO is the ESCO-induced surface elevation, with j = 0, 4. For j = 0, overbars indicate tidal average. For j = 4, overbars indicate that only the M4 tidal component is selected.

At the mouth, the width-averaged ηM0ESCO and ηM4ESCO are required to be zero. At the closed and landward boundaries, the normal component of the depth-integrated ESCO induced water flux is required to vanish,
(H0uMjESCOdz,H0υMjESCOdz)nh=0.
Here nh is the unit horizontal vector normal to the boundaries. At the undisturbed water level z = 0, the shear stress is equal to zero,
AυM0(uMjESCOz,υMjESCOz)=(0,0).
At z = −H, a linearized partial slip boundary condition is applied,
AυM0(uMjESCOz,υMjESCOz)=s(uMjESCO,υMjESCO)(AυM2uM2z¯,AυM2υM2z¯).

With known information on the M2 tidal motion, AυM0 and AυM2, the system of Eqs. (12)(17) can be solved by introducing rotating flow variables (Kumar et al. 2017).

3) Parameterizing small-scale turbulence

To allow for a dynamic dependence of turbulence on the flow and stratification in the extended model, the vertical eddy viscosity Aυ and diffusivity Kυ are derived for each tidal frequency using an empirical formula. Basdurak et al. (2013) proposed a vertical eddy viscosity formula including dependencies on both the depth-averaged velocity and the gradient Richardson number Ri,
Ri=gρcρz(uz)2+(υz)2,
defined as the ratio of the vertical buoyancy gradient to the vertical shear squared. Their parameterization reads
Aυ=c0Hu¯2+υ¯2(1+5Ri)2βz+A^υ,
with c0 = 2.5 × 10−3, A^υ=104 m2 s−1, following Davies et al. (1997) and Pacanowski and Philander (1981), respectively. Here H is the undisturbed water depth, and u¯ and υ¯ are the vertically averaged horizontal velocity components; βz is a function of depth, which is equal to unity above z = −0.1H (following Davies et al. 1997), and is smaller than unity below −0.1H. This formula considers not only the fact that large gradient Richardson numbers dampen turbulence, but also that turbulent flow generates mixing. By fitting A^υ to their microstructure profiler data, Basdurak et al. (2013) found Eq. (19) reproduces quantitatively the patterns of the observed vertical eddy viscosity at a transect of the lower James River estuary. Using a separate set of in situ microstructure data, Basdurak et al. (2017) confirmed this parameterization compares well with their microstructure data derived Aυ in the James River estuary under weakly stratified conditions except over the northern shoal. This implies that the dominant influencing factors for Aυ, i.e., current and stratification, are reasonably well represented by this formula for weakly stratified conditions. Therefore, this formula is considered appropriate for parameterizing the contributions of these two factors to Aυ in the idealized periodically stratified estuary focused upon in the present study.
The lower James River estuary has a tidal range of ~0.9 m during spring tides and 0.4 m during neap, so tidal elevation is negligible compared to the water depth. In shallow meso/macrotidal estuaries, however, the water depth varies significantly within the tidal cycle. This can have a nonnegligible influence on the eddy development and turbulence generation throughout the water column (Uijttewaal and Booij 2000), an effect not taken into account in Eq. (19). To account for this, the tidal elevation is included in the parameterization for this study,
Aυ=c0(η+H)u¯2+υ¯2(1+5Ri*)2βz+A^υ.

Here, βz is taken to be unity at all depths for simplicity. This simplification does not account for the tendency that the size of turbulent eddies decreases with distance toward the bottom within the logarithmic boundary layer (see, e.g., Townsend 1961), i.e., Prandtl’s mixing length concept. This is reasonable because the logarithmic boundary layer is not resolved in the idealized model due to the partial slip condition being applied at a distance above the bed as described before. More importantly, including the vertical variations of Aυ near the bottom does not qualitatively impact the tidal or residual flow patterns (Zitman and Schuttelaars 2012), even though quantitative changes may be found such as an overestimation of Aυ and velocities near the bed (Davies et al. 1997).

The gradient Richardson number Ri* is defined as
Ri*=max[Ri,Rimin],
in which a minimum value of Ri*, Rimin, is introduced. To avoid infinite values of vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity, Rimin has to be larger than −0.2. By allowing negative values of Ri* (for Rimin<0), the enhanced turbulence due to convection (in the presence of unstable stratification) is represented in Eq. (20). The vertical eddy viscosity/diffusivity at each frequency (e.g., M0, M2) can then be derived by extracting the tidally averaged and semidiurnal components of Aυ (ignoring the other frequencies) using a Fourier transform (F):
AυM0=FM0{Aυ},
AυM2=FM2{Aυ}.
Hence, the M2 vertical eddy viscosity can be also written as
AυM2=R{A^υM2exp[i(σM2tϕA^υM2)]},
where R means only the real part is taken into account, ϕA^υM2 and A^υM2 are respectively the phase and complex amplitude of AυM2, and σM2 is the M2 tidal frequency. Higher-frequency terms are neglected in the present study to focus on the ATT associated with the flood–ebb turbulence asymmetries. As the residual and quarter-diurnal tidal currents are usually one order of magnitude smaller than the semidiurnal currents, and Ri* is small in weakly stratified estuaries, the influence of residual circulation, quarter-diurnal tidal currents, and Ri* on AυM0 is also neglected for simplicity. This results in a reduced form of (22) that depends only on the depth-averaged semidiurnal tidal velocities and the undisturbed water depth:
AυM0FM0{c0Hu¯M22+υ¯M22+A^υ}.

4) Dissecting the asymmetric tidal turbulence

The influence of bottom-shear-generated turbulence (BGT), strain-induced periodic stratification (SIPS), and tidal variations of water depth (TWD) on the asymmetric tidal turbulence, which are all included in Eq. (20), can be evaluated individually by dissecting AυM2 in three terms:
AυM2=AυM2BGT+AυM2SIPS+AυM2TWD,
with
AυM2BGT=FM2{c0Hu¯2+υ¯2},
AυM2SIPS=FM2{c0Hu¯2+υ¯2[(1+5Ri*)21]},
AυM2TWD=FM2{c0ηu¯2+υ¯2(1+5Ri*)2}.
Here, AυM2BGT is derived by considering only the effect of BGT; AυM2SIPS is derived by taking the difference between AυM2 generated by both SIPS and BGT, and that generated by BGT only; finally AυM2TWD is obtained by subtracting AυM2SIPS and AυM2BGT from Eq. (23).

5) Iterative method

An iterative approach is used to solve the coupled system of equations. For a given distribution of AυM0, the M2 tidal water motion can be calculated following the same procedure of Kumar et al. (2016). However, due to the dependence of AυM0 on the M2 flow itself [see Eq. (25)], the leading-order M2 water motion needs to be calculated iteratively together with AυM0. As the first step, a spatially uniform AυM0 is used to calculate the semidiurnal, M2 tide. Then, the information on the M2 tide is used in Eq. (25) to derive a new AυM0. In the next iteration step, the updated AυM0 yields a new solution for the M2 water motion, which is then fed back into Eq. (25) to derive a new AυM0. The final solution of AυM0 and the M2 water motion are obtained when the domain-averaged relative difference between the old AυM0 and the updated AυM0 is smaller than 0.1%. After solving the M2 tide and AυM0, the barotropic residual and quarter-diurnal tidal flow due to river discharge, advection, stress-free surface condition and tidal return flow, which are independent of salinity and AυM2, can be solved (Kumar et al. 2017).

The gravitational circulation, GC, is coupled with salinity, and needs to be solved together with salinity (Wei et al. 2017). The ESCO circulation is strongly determined by AυM2, which dynamically depends on stratification and the M0, M2, and M4 water motion including GC and ESCO [see Eq. (20) and Eq. (23)], and contributes to the salinity distribution. Therefore, salinity, AυM2, GC and ESCO circulation also need to be solved iteratively. Initially, GC and salinity are calculated without considering the ESCO circulation, following Wei et al. (2017). Then, the flow velocity, tidal elevation, and salinity are substituted into Eq. (23) to calculate AυM2. With the information on AυM2, the ESCO circulation is calculated, which is used to calculate the new salinity field and GC. This procedure is iterated until the domain-averaged relative difference between the new tidally averaged salinity and the old salinity is again smaller than 0.1%.

b. Experiments design

Parameters representative of the Blackwater estuary (in Essex, United Kingdom), which are typical for short estuaries, are used as a template in this study. Four experiments are conducted. In experiment I, Eq. (23) is used to calculate AυM2, where the influences of BGT, SIPS, and TWD on ATT are all considered. In experiments II, III, and IV, the individual contribution of BGT, SIPS, and TWD are investigated by considering contribution of each of these processes separately in the formulation of AυM2.

1) Default experiment

Parameters characteristic for the Blackwater estuary are considered in the default experiment. The estuary is 28 km long (with a weir located at the estuarine head, see Fig. 2a), and has a tidal amplitude of ~2 m, representative of short, mesotidal estuaries.

Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.

Bathymetry of (a) the realistic Blackwater estuary and (b) the idealized estuary. The dots in (b) show different locations which represent the mid-estuary channel (MC) and shoal (MS), respectively. All water depths are relative to the undisturbed water level.

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

The geometry and bathymetry of the Blackwater estuary are simplified in the idealized model, see Fig. 2b. The width of the idealized Blackwater estuary is considered to exponentially decrease landward,
B=B0exLb,
with B0 the width at the mouth, and Lb the estuarine convergence length. The water depth in the idealized estuary is described by
H=H1+xLH2+(H3xLH3)exp(Csy2B02),
with H1, H2, and H3 prescribed depth parameters, Cs the shoal parameter, and L the estuarine length; see Table 1 for their values. Comparing Figs. 2a and 2b, the idealized bathymetry is featured with a deeper channel in the middle and shallower shoals on each side, the main bathymetric feature of the real Blackwater estuary. The minimum water depth in the idealized case is 3.2 m (larger than the tidal amplitude), hence effects of intertidal flats are not considered.
Table 1.

Definitions of acronyms.

Table 1.

The dominant tidal constituent here is the M2 tidal constituent, with a tidal amplitude of 2 m at the mouth. The river discharge in the Blackwater estuary fluctuates from ~1 m3 s−1 to up to 30 m3 s−1. During low river flow conditions, the estuary is mostly well mixed throughout the tidal cycle. During high river flows, the water column is well mixed during flood and weakly stratified during ebb. To focus on periodically stratified conditions, a constant river discharge Q = 20 m3 s−1 is used. Previous observations in this estuary show the water column can exhibit slightly unstable stratification during flood tides (Talbot 1967; Fox et al. 1999). To parameterize the enhanced turbulence due to convective instability in case of unstable stratification, the minimum depth-mean gradient Richardson number (Rimin) is set to be −0.01.

Influence of unresolved processes contributing to horizontal dispersion are parameterized by a horizontal eddy diffusivity Kh. This coefficient is related to the local cross-sectional area and the along-channel salinity gradient, according to Savenije (2015). For simplicity, it is assumed to linearly decrease with the estuarine width following Wei et al. (2017),
Kh=Kh0+ChBB0,
with Ch = 10 m2 s−1. All other parameter values are given in Table 2.
Table 2.

Parameters for the idealized Blackwater estuary.

Table 2.

2) Sensitivity experiments

Equations (27)(29) are respectively used in experiments II–IV (see Table 3), to investigate the individual contribution of BGT, SIPS, and TWD to the M2 vertical eddy viscosity and estuarine circulation (see section 3b).

Table 3.

Parameterizing formula for Aυ and Kυ in each experiment.

Table 3.

3. Results

The patterns of the ATT, residual circulation, and salt transport in the idealized short estuary are shown in section 3a. The individual contributions of SIPS, BGT, and TWD to ATT are quantified in section 3b. The interactions between ATT, water motion, and salinity distribution are unraveled in section 3c. The semidiurnal and quarter-diurnal tidal properties are shown in appendix E.

a. Varying patterns of vertical eddy viscosity, water motion, and salinity distribution

1) Vertical eddy viscosity

The tidally averaged vertical eddy viscosity AυM0 and the depth-mean absolute amplitude of the semidiurnal tidal component |A^υM2| both peak in the downstream channel and decrease landward as well as from the channel toward the shoals, as shown in Fig. 3. In most of the estuary, |A^υM2| is smaller than AυM0. At a small region of the mid-estuary (at x ≈ 10 km), however, |A^υM2| slightly exceeds AυM0. This is caused by enhanced turbulence due to convective instabilities in case of unstable stratification (by allowing for negative gradient Richardson numbers with Rimin=0.01), shown later in section 3b. The absolute amplitude of the semidiurnal eddy viscosity, |A^υM2|, is smaller than AυM0 throughout the estuary when considering Rimin=0 (not shown), highlighting the importance of convective instabilities to the generation of ATM.

Fig. 3.
Fig. 3.

The distribution of (a) the tidally averaged vertical eddy viscosity AυM0, (b) amplitude of the semidiurnal vertical eddy viscosity A^υM2, and (c) phase of the semidiurnal vertical eddy viscosity ϕA^υM2.

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

The depth-mean phase of AυM2 shows remarkable lateral variability for x < 12 km and is almost constant across the channel further upstream. This is probably related to the water depth, which has strong lateral variations in the downstream and is almost laterally uniform in the upstream (Fig. 2b). In the central estuary (x ≈ 10 km), the depth-mean phase of AυM2 in the channel is in advance of that on the shoals by ~180°, meaning AυM2 attains its maximum ~6 h earlier than that on the shoals (Fig. 3c).

2) Residual circulation

The depth-mean total residual circulation is up to 0.08 m s−1 and consists of a landward flow in the channel and a seaward flow on the shoals (Fig. 4a). This total circulation is then decomposed into different components following Eq. (8). The contributions of the dominant residual circulation components are shown in Fig. 4. The depth-averaged gravitational circulation (GC), with a maximum velocity of 0.10 m s−1, is the largest estuarine circulation component, followed by ESCO circulation (up to 0.047 m s−1) and advection driven circulation (AC, up to 0.040 m s−1). The depth-averaged ESCO circulation shows an outflow in the channel and inflow on the shoals, contrasting the patterns of GC and AC. The differences in depth-averaged patterns between ESCO circulation and GC agree with findings of Scully and Friedrichs (2007) in the York River estuary. The residual circulation due to the no-shear surface condition, tidal return flow and river discharge are small, hence are not shown.

Fig. 4.
Fig. 4.

(a),(e) Total residual circulation and individual contributions due to (b),(f) gravitational circulation, (c),(g) ESCO, and (d),(h) advection. The top panels show depth-mean horizontal velocities in the estuary and the bottom panels show cross-sectional distributions of longitudinal velocities at x = 10 km. Arrows in (a)–(d) represent the depth-averaged horizontal velocity vectors including the lateral velocity component.

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

Looking at a transect at x = 10 km, the total residual circulation is apparent with a strong near-bottom inflow in the channel and near-surface outflow on the shoals (Fig. 4e). There is also a weak inflow in the upper layers of the channel, which does not agree with the “classical” estuarine circulation (with near-bottom inflow and near-surface outflow; see, e.g., Lerczak and Geyer 2004). This discrepancy is probably related to the overestimated vertical eddy viscosity near the surface, as a result of taking βz = 1 at all depths. In reality, turbulence has to vanish at the free surface, potentially increasing vertical shear (by reducing the vertical exchange of momentum) and enhancing the near-surface outflow due to tidal return flow, ESCO, and river discharge.

The cross-sectional distribution of GC is similar to the total circulation (Fig. 4f), highlighting the dominant role of GC in determining the structure of the total residual circulation in this idealized estuary. The patterns of GC are in agreement with existing analytical studies for large Ekman number (Kasai et al. 2000; Valle-Levinson et al. 2003; Huijts et al. 2009), where vertical eddy viscosity was assumed to be vertically uniform. ESCO circulation shows an outflow in the deep channel and inflow on the shoals (Fig. 4g), in agreement with model results of the Delaware estuary (Geyer et al. 2020). The patterns of GC and ESCO circulation are also consistent with the numerical results of Burchard et al. (2011) for small Simpson number. Advectively driven circulation shows inflow on the right side of the channel (looking landward) and outflow on the left side, consistent Huijts et al. (2009).

3) Salinity distribution and transport

The tidally averaged salinity SM0 decreases from 31 psu at the mouth to zero at ~20 km from the mouth (Fig. 5a). The tidally averaged salinities are higher in the deep channel than on the shallow shoal. Due to Coriolis effects, SM0 is larger on the right side of the estuary than on the left (looking toward the head). The amplitude of the top-to-bottom salinity difference peaks in the central estuary with a maximum value of 1.5 psu (Fig. 5b). The amplitude of SM2 also peaks in the central estuary, with a maximum value of 3.5 psu (Fig. 5c). The M2 tidal salinity has a small spatial phase difference (Fig. 5d), lagging behind the M2 velocity by ~90°.

Fig. 5.
Fig. 5.

(a) The residual salinity SM0. (b) The absolute amplitude of the salinity difference between the top and the bottom: ΔS = |StopSbottom|. (c) Absolute amplitude and (d) phase of the depth-averaged semidiurnal salinity SM2.

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

The relative importance of different processes to the residual salt transport in the idealized estuary is evaluated by calculating the cross-sectionally integrated residual salt transport due to each process, following Wei et al. (2017). Figure 6 shows the salt transport contributions due to tidal advection of salinity (TASF, red), ESCO circulation (ESCO, blue), gravitational circulation (GC, green), advection (AC, orange), shear-free surface (NS, yellow), tidal return flow (TRFSD, brown), horizontal diffusion (DIFF, pink), and river flow (RD, gray). In the idealized estuary, the residual salt balance is dominated by the landward salt transport due to horizontal diffusion and the seaward transport due to river discharge. TASF and GC play an almost equally important role in transporting salt into the estuary, followed by AC. ESCO circulation, due to its reversed structure, tends to flush salt out of the estuary. The salt transport contributions due to all residual flow components, except river flow, vanish after the first 15 km because SM0 becomes laterally uniform as a result of small lateral depth variations (Fig. 2b).

Fig. 6.
Fig. 6.

The tidally averaged, along-channel salt transport integrated over the cross-section due to tidal advection of salinity (TASF, red), ESCO circulation (ESCO, blue), gravitational circulation (GC, green), advection (AC, orange), shear-free surface (NS, yellow), tidal return flow that compensates Stokes drift (TRFSD, brown), horizontal diffusion (DIFF, pink), and river flow (RD, gray).

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

b. Dissecting drivers of asymmetric tidal turbulence

To understand the response of the vertical eddy viscosity Aυ to the flow and salinity changes, the tidal variations of vertical profiles of the along-channel velocity, salinity, gradient Richardson number Ri, and Aυ are plotted in Fig. 7 for two locations, representing the channel and shoal, respectively. The longitudinal velocity is flood dominant in the channel and ebb dominant on the shoal. At both locations, unstable stratification (with higher salinities at the top than the bottom) arises during the flood tide while stable stratification occurs during the ebb, consistent with previous observations in the Blackwater estuary (Talbot 1967). The unstable stratification results in negative values of gradient Richardson number Ri during flood and positive values during ebb. Negative values of gradient Richardson number (Ri ≪ −0.01) are found in most of the water column under flood conditions. Since the vertical variations of Aυ can only originate from Ri* (by taking βz = 1), which is equal to Rimin for Ri<Rimin (Rimin=0.01), Aυ is vertically homogeneous in most of the water column (Fig. 7g). During ebb, large positive values of Ri occur due to small vertical shear. As the vertical eddy viscosity is reversely related to Ri when it is positive, Aυ approaches zero at depths with Ri > 0.25. This is consistent with the laboratory findings of Rohr et al. (1988) that turbulence decays for Ri>Ric, where Ric0.25 is the critical Richardson number. It is also found that Aυ is larger during flood than ebb in the channel but is larger during ebb on the shoal. This implies that the periodic stratification, which tends to increase Aυ during flood and reduce it during ebb at both locations [following Eq. (28)], is not always the dominant driver of asymmetric tidal turbulence (ATT), for example, on the shoal.

Fig. 7.
Fig. 7.

Time series of the vertical distribution of (a),(b) along-channel velocity u; (c),(d) salinity S; (e),(f) gradient Richardson number Ri; and (g),(h) vertical eddy viscosity Aυ [calculated from Eq. (20)] at the (left) channel (x = 10 km, y = 0) and (right) shoal (x = 10 km, y = 0.3 km).

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

To identify the dominant driver(s) of ATT in this idealized estuary, the individual contributions of strain-induced periodic stratification (SIPS), asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence (BGT) and tidal variation of water depth (TWD) to the semidiurnal variations of vertical eddy viscosity are calculated using Eqs. (27)(29), respectively. Both SIPS and BGT are dominant drivers of ATT in this idealized estuary, whereas the contribution of TWD to ATT is small (Figs. 8a–c). The depth-mean amplitude of SIPS induced M2 vertical eddy viscosity, |A^υM2SIPS|, peaks at the mouth (Fig. 8a). It is larger in the channel than on the shoals near the mouth, and larger on the shoals than in the channel in the central estuary. The depth-mean amplitude of BGT induced M2 vertical eddy viscosity, |A^υM2BGT|, also peaks near the mouth, and is larger in the channel than on the shoals throughout the estuary. The relative phase of the M2 vertical eddy viscosity due to all processes shows stronger channel-to-shoal than along-channel variability (Figs. 8d–f). The phase of AυM2SIPS is between −50° and −70°, with small cross-channel and along-channel variations (less than 20°, Fig. 8d). The phase of AυM2BGT slightly increases toward the head, but increases sharply from −120° in the channel to 120° on the shoals (Fig. 8e). This means that AυM2BGT changes by up to 8 h later on the shoals than in the channel. The phase of AυM2TWD is less than 10° everywhere, meaning it is almost synchronous with ηM2. These results imply that SIPS and BGT can act differently on ATT: both processes support flood-dominant eddy viscosity in the channel, but their contributions to ATT counteract each other on the shoals (shown in Fig. 7h).

Fig. 8.
Fig. 8.

Amplitude and phase of the semidiurnal vertical eddy viscosity caused by (a),(d) strain-induced periodic stratification, (b),(e) tidal asymmetries in the bottom-shear generated turbulence, and (c),(f) tidally varying water depth. The phases are relative to the semidiurnal tidal surface elevation at the mouth.

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

c. Interaction mechanisms between asymmetric tidal turbulence, water motion and salinity distribution

The decomposition of ATT into different contributions allows a systematic investigation of the interacting mechanisms between ATT, water motion and salinity distribution. In this section, the interactions are shown by illustrating the influence of ATT on residual circulation [section 3c(1)] and salinity [section 3c(2)], and the impact of tidal straining and flow asymmetry on ATT [section 3c(3)].

1) Influence of ATT on estuarine circulation

Asymmetric tidal turbulence, ATT, is essential to the generation of ESCO circulation. Because the ESCO circulation modulates the horizontal salinity gradients, it also indirectly influences GC. Figure 9 shows the cross-sectional distribution at x = 10 km of the along-channel GC (Figs. 9a–c) and ESCO circulation (Figs. 9d–f) in experiments II–IV as a result of the individual ATT contributions of strain-induced periodic stratification (SIPS, left panels), asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence (BGT, middle panels), and tidal variations of water depth (TWD, right panels). In all experiments, GC is stronger than the ESCO circulation. The spatial pattern of GC is consistent across the experiments, but its strength changes remarkably. When considering SIPS induced ATT only, the along-channel GC is up to 0.12 m s−1. It increases to 0.15 m s−1 when considering the BGT effects on ATT, and is up to 0.13 m s−1 (same as that in the default experiment) when considering the TWD effects only.

Fig. 9.
Fig. 9.

Cross-sectional distribution of (a)–(c) gravitational circulation, (d)–(f) ESCO circulation, and (g)–(i) the ESCO-induced residual shear stress divided by the residual eddy viscosity, ϑ=AυM2uM2/z¯/AυM0, when considering the individual contributions of (left) strain-induced periodic stratification, (center) asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence, and (right) tidal depth variation to the asymmetric tidal turbulence. The transect is located at x = 10 km.

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

The ESCO circulation changes even more across the experiments, compared to GC. The ESCO induced by SIPS, BGT, and TWD results in a maximal velocity of 0.05, 0.1, and 0.004 m s−1, respectively (Figs. 9d–f). Under the influence of BGT and TWD, the ESCO circulation yields an outflow in the channel and inflow on the shoals. The ESCO circulation caused by SIPS, however, generates an inflow in the channel and outflow on the shoals. That means, in this idealized estuary, the ESCO circulation caused by BGT and TWD act against GC to weaken the total estuarine circulation, while that driven by SIPS is in support of GC to strengthen the total estuarine circulation.

As illustrated by Burchard and Hetland (2010), the ESCO circulation at a certain position is reversely related to the ESCO-induced residual shear stress divided by the residual eddy viscosity (ϑ=AυM2uM2/z¯/AυM0) integrated from the bed to the vertical position of interest. Figures 9g–i show the cross-sectional distribution of ϑ when considering each of the three processes. Concerning the SIPS mechanism, positive values of ϑ are found across the section (Fig. 9g) which tend to drive seaward currents. Since the cross-sectionally integrated residual water transport has to vanish and ϑ is larger on the shoals than in the channel, the SIPS-induced ESCO consists of an outflow on the shoals and inflow in the channel. Concerning the BGT effects, however, ϑ is positive in the channel and negative on the shoals (Fig. 9h). Hence, this yields a strong outflow in the channel and inflow on the sides. ATT also contributes to a small quarter-diurnal tidal flow, as shown in Fig. E1a.

The contribution of SIPS to AυM2 and the ESCO circulation is sensitive to the minimum gradient Richardson number Rimin. Decreasing Rimin will result in a smaller contribution of SIPS to the ESCO circulation because of smaller lateral variations of ϑ. This will then contribute to an enhanced ESCO circulation and a weaker total residual circulation (results not shown).

2) Influence of ATT on salinity distribution

The residual salinity distribution is strongly influenced by the residual eddy viscosity AυM0, because it significantly affects the TASF by controlling the magnitude and vertical structure of the semidiurnal tidal velocity and salinity (Wei et al. 2016), and influences the strength of all residual flow components. The semidiurnal component of vertical eddy diffusivity KυM2 does not directly contribute to the residual salinity distribution due to the vertically homogeneous nature of SM0. The semidiurnal component of vertical eddy viscosity AυM2 influences the horizontal salinity distributions in two ways. First, as shown earlier in Fig. 6, the ESCO circulation due to the temporal correlations between vertical shear and AυM2, plays an important role in exporting salt out of the estuary and effectively redistributes salt. Moreover, the ESCO induced residual salt transport results in changes in horizontal salinity gradients, and yields an adapted gravitational circulation which again modifies the residual salinity distribution.

The influence of individual drivers of ATT (i.e., SIPS, BGT, and TWD) on salt transport can also be evaluated by recalculating the cross-sectionally integrated residual salt transport considering each process in separation (experiments II–IV). The SIPS induced ATT tends to import salt in the central estuary and export salt near the mouth through ESCO circulation (not shown). To balance this contribution, the GC induced salt transport is increased near the mouth, and decreased in the central estuary, compared to the default experiment. The BGT- and TWD-induced ATT exports salt throughout the estuary, and effectively enhances the GC induced landward salt transport.

The salinity stratification is related to the vertical structure and amplitude of SM2. The vertical structure of SM2 is strongly determined by the residual eddy viscosity [see Eqs. (D7) and (D8)], and not affected by AυM2 or KυM2. The amplitude of SM2 is determined by the horizontal gradients of the M2 sea surface elevation and residual salinity, hence is affected by ATT in the same way as shown above.

3) Impact of water motion and salinity on asymmetric tidal turbulence

In this section, the feedback of water motion and salinity distribution on ATT is explored. The driving mechanism of salinity stratification associated with the semidiurnal tide, which is key for the SIPS induced ATT, is investigated in section 3c(3)(i). Influence of the residual circulation and quarter-diurnal tide on tidal asymmetric BGT, essential for AυM2BGT, are explored in section 3c(3)(ii). The contribution of TWD to ATT is linearly proportional to the relative tidal elevation compared to the local water depth, and is not discussed in more detail.

(i) Influence of the semidiurnal tide on asymmetric tidal turbulence

Both Ri* and AυM2SIPS are sensitive to the characteristics of the semidiurnal (M2) tide because this tidal constituent controls the vertical shear and stratification. In the idealized estuary, the relative phase of stratification compared to the semidiurnal vertical shear, is almost constant across the estuary as the semidiurnal tide propagates at a pumping mode. Hence, Ri*, as well as AυM2SIPS, is primarily controlled by the amplitudes of the vertical shear and stratification. Due to relatively small along-channel variations of the shear compared to stratification, the latter controls the longitudinal distribution of AυM2SIPS.

The temporal changes of stratification can be described by taking the vertical derivative of the salinity equation. Since the leading-order salinity is time and depth independent, the leading order equation of the vertical salinity gradient reduces to
t(SM2z)+2z2(KυM0SM2z)=uM2zSM0xACS+υM2zSM0yCCS.

Equation (33) indicates that, in periodically weakly stratified estuaries dominated by the semidiurnal tide, the temporal variations of stratification are caused by interactions between along-channel salinity gradients and the vertical shear due to along-channel semidiurnal tidal velocities, i.e., along-channel tidal straining (ACS), and interactions between cross-channel salinity gradients and the vertical shear due to cross-channel semidiurnal tidal velocities, i.e., cross-channel tidal straining (CCS). Note that in more strongly stratified conditions (not considered in this study), horizontal advection of vertical salinity gradients can also contribute to tidal variations of stratification (Scully and Geyer 2012).

Substituting the analytical expression of uM2 and υM2 [see details in appendix A and Kumar et al. (2016)] into Eq. (33), the analytical solution of the vertical salinity gradient can be derived:
SM2z=Szz1ηM2xSM0x+Szz2ηM2ySM0xSzM2ACS+Szz1ηM2ySM0ySzz2ηM2xSM0ySzM2CCS.

Here SzM2ACS and SzM2CCS denote the vertical salinity gradient produced by ACS and CCS, respectively. Equation (34) shows the semidiurnal tide influences stratification in three ways. First, the vertical profile of stratification, controlled by Szz1 and Szz2, is determined by the vertical structures of the M2 tidal currents and salinity, see details in appendix D. Second, stratification is linearly dependent on the horizontal gradients of the semidiurnal tidal elevation and SM0. Last but not least, since TASF, resulting from advection of the semidiurnal tidal salinity by the semidiurnal tidal currents, contributes to the second largest landward residual salt transport (see Fig. 6), the semidiurnal tide significantly influences stratification also by controlling the horizontal salinity gradients.

The amplitudes of the depth-mean SzM2ACS and SzM2CCS in the idealized estuary are shown in Fig. 10. Here, large values of |S^zM2ACS| and |S^zM2CCS| indicate large intratidal variations of stratification, which facilitate large fluctuations of AυM2SIPS. In most of the estuary, |S^zM2ACS|, with a maximum magnitude of 0.5 psu m−1, is larger than |S^zM2CCS|, which is less than 0.05 psu m−1. It implies that the impact of ACS on the intratidal variations of AυM2SIPS (through Ri*) is more important than that of CCS in the idealized estuary. Note here the patterns of |S^zM2ACS| and |S^zM2CCS| are different from that of the top-to-bottom salinity difference (Fig. 5b) due to the spatial variations in bathymetry. Influences of ACS and CCS on ATT are also different due to their different phasing (not shown). The CCS effect, although small in this idealized estuary, can become significant in cases of sharp lateral depth variations, strong channel curvature, or large channel width.

Fig. 10.
Fig. 10.

Tidal amplitude of the depth-averaged vertical salinity gradients induced by (a) along-channel tidal straining (ACS) and (b) cross-channel tidal straining (CCS).

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

(ii) Influence of residual circulation and quarter-diurnal tide on asymmetric tidal turbulence

The residual circulation plays an important role in the residual salt transport, hence affecting the horizontal salinity gradients and stratification, and modulating ATT through AυM2SIPS. The residual circulation also contributes to the bottom-shear-generated turbulence, BGT, hence modulating ATT through AυM2BGT. The quarter-diurnal tide does not directly contribute to the residual salt transport or stratification, and is unimportant with regard to AυM2SIPS. However, it can significantly affect the tidal asymmetries in the currents, and contribute to ATT through AυM2BGT.

The residual circulation and quarter-diurnal tidal velocity are of the same order of magnitude in most of estuary (see Figs. 4a,e and 11e), suggesting that both components can play an important role in generating asymmetries in BGT and contribute to AυM2BGT. The residual circulation tends to promote flood dominance in the channel and ebb dominance on the shoals. In contrast, the quarter-diurnal tide tends to promote ebb dominance in the channel and flood dominance on the shoals (Fig. 11f). Therefore, the flood–ebb asymmetry in BGT strongly depends on the relative importance of contributions of the residual circulation and quarter-diurnal tide to the tidal velocity asymmetry. In the deep channel and on the shallow shoals, residual circulation dominates the tidal velocity asymmetry, hence during flood AυM2BGT is positive in the channel and negative on the shoals, and vice versa during ebb. Over the shoulders of the channel, residual circulation is weak and the quarter-diurnal tidal currents dominate the tidal velocity asymmetry, hence the phase of AυM2BGT is close to Δϕ there.

Fig. 11.
Fig. 11.

Amplitude and phase of (a),(b) the semidiurnal tidal surface elevation ηM2, and (c),(d) the depth-mean along-channel semidiurnal tidal velocities. (e) Amplitude of the depth-mean longitudinal velocity at the quarter-diurnal tidal frequency. (f) Relative phase of the depth-mean quarter-diurnal tidal velocity compared to the semidiurnal tidal velocity: Δϕ=2ϕM2ϕM4. The phase and amplitude of ηM2, uM2, and uM4 are derived by noting ηM2=R[|ηM2|ei(σM2tΦM2)], uM2=R[|uM2|ei(σM2tϕM2)], and uM4=R[|uM4|ei(σM4tϕM4)]. All phases are relative to the semidiurnal tidal elevation at the mouth.

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

4. Discussion

To facilitate a comparison of our semi-analytic model results with existing numerical studies that focus on long estuaries, the model was also applied to a long estuary with a length of 100 km (results not shown). The estuarine convergence length is reduced to keep the width at the mouth and the river boundary the same as those in the short estuary. In this case, the ESCO circulation is stronger than gravitational circulation, GC. This opposes the results for the short estuary, where GC is stronger than the ESCO circulation (see Figs. 4b,c). This difference between the short and long estuary seems to agree with the cross-sectional model results of Burchard et al. (2011) for large and small Simpson number (Si), respectively. They found that the residual circulation is dominated by GC for large Si but dominated by ESCO for small Si. This agreement is probably related to the larger Si in the short estuary due to relatively large along-channel salinity gradients when compared to the long estuary.

The different asymmetric tidal turbulence and ESCO circulation patterns caused by strain-induced periodic stratification (SIPS) and bottom-shear-generated turbulence (BGT) shown in this study indicate that the variable ESCO circulation patterns found in previous studies may be related to different processes being dominant in different systems. In case ATT is dominated by SIPS, ESCO circulation and GC follow similar patterns. In case ATT is dominated by BGT, the structure of ESCO circulation depends on the tidal asymmetries in BGT. The tidal asymmetries in BGT, due to their dependence on the residual and quarter-diurnal tidal currents, are significantly influenced by estuarine topography, geometry, length, and forcing (Jay 1991; Friedrichs and Aubrey 1994; Ridderinkhof et al. 2014).

Although the semi-analytical model has some limitations with regard to complex estuarine environments due to the adoption of several assumptions [e.g., weak quarter-diurnal variations of turbulence, linearized bottom friction, vertically homogeneous residual vertical eddy viscosity, unity Prandtl–Schmidt number (Pr)], it does provide valuable insights into the dynamic interacting barotropic and baroclinic processes. Nevertheless, these assumptions can result in quantitatively different results when compared to reality.

  1. By focusing on weakly stratified estuaries in this study, it is reasonable to assume that the semidiurnal vertical eddy viscosity is an order of magnitude smaller than the residual viscosity [Eq. (11)]. By making these assumptions, the tidal variations of vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity (asymmetric tidal turbulence, ATT) do not directly influence the semidiurnal tide, GC, or the residual salinity. Nevertheless, ATT can indirectly influence GC and the residual salinity through the ESCO-induced salt transport. In partially stratified estuaries, where the residual and semidiurnal salinities are within the same order of magnitude, ATT can significantly influence the water motion and salinity at all tidal frequencies. In those systems, the influence of ATT on estuarine circulation and salt transport can be even stronger (see, e.g., Dijkstra et al. 2017).

  2. By tuning the friction parameters to obtain the best fit of the observed sea level and velocities, the linearized bed friction assumption allows good reproduction of the residual and dominant tidal bed stresses (Geyer et al. 2000; Li et al. 2004), but the overtide and its induced tidal asymmetry are not well reproduced (Friedrichs and Aubrey 1994). Therefore, the relative importance of the bottom-shear generated ATT, ESCO circulation, GC, and salt transport can differ quantitatively from those when considering a more realistic quadratic bottom friction.

  3. The tidally averaged vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity are assumed to be vertically uniform in our model (by taking βz = 1). In reality, these coefficients can change significantly in the vertical (Peters 1997; Huguenard et al. 2015; Ross et al. 2019). Considering vanishing turbulence at the free surface and the bottom, for example, will probably increase near-surface seaward currents and reduce them near the bottom, increase stratification, reduce lateral exchange, and strengthen the along-channel GC. Consequently, the individual contributions of SIPS and BGT to the generation of ATT and ESCO circulation will probably be increased.

  4. A unity Pr, which is observed in salt wedge estuaries (Geyer and Smith 1987; Holleman et al. 2016), was considered in this study for simplicity. In reality, Pr is related to the gradient Richardson number, according to Stacey et al. (1999). They found that Pr reduces to 0.7 when the gradient Richardson number approaches zero. Therefore, by assuming Pr = 1, we overestimated the vertical eddy diffusivity particularly during the flood tide. This probably has led to underestimated unstable stratification and underestimated contribution of strain-induced periodic stratification to the asymmetric tidal turbulence and ESCO circulation.

5. Conclusions

Focusing on asymmetric tidal turbulence (ATT) at the semidiurnal (M2) tidal frequency, a semi-analytical model was developed to study the dynamic interactions between asymmetric tidal turbulence (parameterized by the M2 variations of vertical eddy viscosity and diffusivity), water motion and salinity in periodically, weakly stratified estuaries. This model was applied to an idealized short estuary. Results show that, gravitational circulation (GC) is the most important estuarine circulation component, followed by the residual circulation related to ATT and eddy viscosity shear covariance (ESCO), and the advectively driven circulation (AC). The depth-mean ESCO circulation exhibits a reversed pattern compared to GC and AC, resulting in a significant residual seaward salt transport. This contrasts the significant landward salt transport induced by GC. Tidal pumping (due to advection of salinity by semidiurnal tidal currents) also plays an important role in transporting salt landward in this short estuary.

Asymmetric tidal turbulence influences estuarine circulation not only by being essential to the generation of the ESCO circulation, but also by modulating the horizontal salinity gradients (due to the ESCO generated salt transport), hence affecting GC. It is found that the impact of ATT on residual circulation and salt transport strongly depends on the dominant mechanisms generating ATT, namely, strain-induced periodic stratification (SIPS) and asymmetric bottom-shear-generated turbulence (BGT). SIPS increases vertical eddy viscosity during flood and reduce it during ebb, and this effect is more significant on the shoals than in the channel. This results in an ESCO circulation with almost the same depth-averaged structure as GC, and tends to transport salt landward. This transport tends to reduce longitudinal salinity gradients and hence weakens GC. BGT yields a higher eddy viscosity during flood in the channel and during ebb over the shoals. This results in a reversed ESCO circulation with depth-averaged patterns opposite to GC. This ESCO circulation acts to increase longitudinal salinity gradients and hence enhances GC.

The feedback of water motion and salinity distribution on ATT is also revealed. The semidiurnal tide predominantly controls the ATT generated by SIPS because this tidal constituent controls the vertical shear and stratification. Due to the dependence of stratification on horizontal salinity gradients, the semidiurnal tide also indirectly affects ATT by modulating these gradients due to the important landward salt transport contribution induced by tidal pumping. Residual circulation and the quarter-diurnal tide both contribute significantly to tidal asymmetries in velocities, hence strongly influencing the ATT induced by BGT. Due to strong tidal velocity asymmetries and weak stratification in this idealized short estuary, the BGT effects dominate over the SIPS effects in the generation of ATT which explains the reversed structure of the total ESCO circulation. These findings highlight the influence of different turbulence sources on ATT, hydro- and salinity dynamics can differ significantly. Since the relative importance of these sources are strongly dependent on estuarine bathymetry, geometry and forcing, the techniques developed here can be used to gain a general understanding of turbulence variations, and their influence and dependence on the estuarine circulation and stratification in realistic estuaries.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge funding from the Natural Environment Research Council through the BLUEcoast project (NE/N015894/1). HMS and LOA also acknowledge funding to the SUPREME project from NWO in the Netherlands and the Newton Fund via the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Grant ALWSD.2016.015 in the Netherlands, and Grant EP/R024480/1 in the United Kingdom). MEW was partially supported by Chilean Fondecyt project 11191077. This work used the NOC cluster MOBIUS and the ARCHER U.K. National Supercomputing Service (http://www.archer.ac.uk). We appreciate the constructive comments from two anonymous reviewers, which significantly improved our paper. All data used in this paper are available on Zenodo (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4666030).

APPENDIX A

Leading-Order Water Motion

The leading-order water motion follow from the M2 components of the shallow water equations:
uM2x+υM2y+wM2z=0,
uM2tfυM2=gηM2x+AυM02uM2z2,
υM2t+fuM2=gηM2y+AυM02υM2z2,
with boundary conditions
ηM2=aM2atx=0,
[H0(uM2,υM2)dz]nh=0atx=L,
[H0(uM2,υM2)dz]nh=0aty=±B/2,
AυM0(uM2z,υM2z)=0atz=0,
wM2=ηM2tatz=0,
wM2=uM2HxυM2Hyatz=H,
AυM0(uM2z,υM2z)=s(uM2,υM2)atz=H.

For a given AυM0, the leading-order water motion can be calculated following Kumar et al. (2016). Since AυM0 depends on the leading-order water motion, an iterative procedure is taken to solve the M2 tidal flow and AυM0, see section 2a(5).

APPENDIX B

First-Order Water Motion

a. Governing equations

The first-order residual flow contains two tidal frequencies: M0 and M4. The governing equations for residual flows at these two frequencies are derived by considering the tidal average or the M4 component of the shallow water equations:
uMjx+υMjy+wMjz=0,
R{uM2uM2x¯+υM2uM2y¯+wM2uM2z¯}ACfυMj=gηMjx
+AυM02uMjz2+gβzSM0xGC+AυM22uM2z2¯ESCO,
R{uM2υM2x¯+υM2υM2y¯+wM2υM2z¯}AC+fuMj
=gηMjy+AυM02υMjz2+gβzSM0yGC+AυM22υM2z2¯ESCO.
The boundary conditions are
ηMj=aMjatx=0,
[H0(uMj,υMj)dz+(ηM2uM2¯|z=0,ηM2υM2¯|z=0)TRFSD]nh=RiRDatx=L,
[H0(uMj,υMj)dz+(ηM2uM2¯|z=0,ηM2υM2¯|z=0)TRFSD]nh=0aty=±B/2,
AυM0(uMjz,υMjz)=R{AυM0(ηM22uM2z2¯,ηM22υM2z2¯)}NSatz=0,
wMj=R{ηM2wM2z¯+uM2ηM2x¯+υM2ηM2y¯}TRFSDatz=0,
wMj=uMjHxυMjHyatz=H,
AυM0(uMjz,υMjz)+(AυM2uM2z¯,AυM2υM2z¯)ESCO=s(uMj,υMj)atz=H.
Here j = 0, 4, and the underbrace denotes various mechanisms that force the residual flow. Equations (B1)(B4) show that the residual flow is forced by advective contributions of the leading order M2 tide (tidal rectification, denoted by AD), density driven gravitational circulation (GC), the stress-free surface condition (NS), river discharge (RD), a return flow (TRFSD), and ESCO circulation. Since the first-order water motion equations (B1) and (B4) are linear, the residual flow components due to these forcing mechanisms can be solved separately. Hence, the solution of the residual water motion can be written as
χMj=χMjRD+χMjTRFSD+χMjAC+χMjGC+χMjNS+χMjESCO,
with the solution vector χMj=(ηMj,uMj,υMj,wMj). All residual contributions can be calculated explicitly without information about the salinity field following Kumar et al. (2017), except ESCO and gravitational circulation, which depend on the other flow components and salinity. Note here χM4GC=0, because there is no M4 forcing for the gravitational circulation.

APPENDIX C

Leading-Order Salinity

Following Wei et al. (2017), the leading-order salinity equation is given by
SM0t=z(KυM0SM0z).
Since there is no horizontal salt transport at this order, the boundary conditions at the closed and landward boundaries are automatically satisfied. The remaining boundary conditions are
SM0=Smatx=0,
KυM0SM0z=0atz=Handz=0.

APPENDIX D

First-Order Salinity

The first-order salinity equation reads
SM2t+uM2SM0x+υM2SM0y=KυM02SM2z2+KυM22SM0z2.
As SM0 is vertically homogeneous under periodically weakly stratified conditions, SM0/z=0, the above equation reduces to
SM2t+uM2SM0x+υM2SM0y=KυM02SM2z2.
The boundary conditions for the first-order salinity equation are
S¯M2=0atx=0,
(H0uM2SM0¯dz,H0υM2SM0¯dz)nh=0aty=±B/2orx=L,
KυM0SM2z=0atz=H,0.
Here the overbars denote tidal average. Solving the above system of equations yields an analytical expression for SM2, as found by Wei et al. (2017):
SM2=Sz1(ηM2xSM0x+ηM2ySM0y)+Sz2(ηM2ySM0xηM2xSM0y).
Here Sz1 and Sz2 are depth-dependent functions that describe the vertical salinity structure, given by,
Sz1=b1γ1(coshα1zα1sinhα1HβsinhβHcoshβz)Kυ(α12β2)+b2γ2(coshα2zα2sinhα2HβsinhβHcoshβz)Kυ(α22β2)+b1+b2iσ,
Sz2=ib1γ1(coshα1zα1sinhα1HβsinhβHcoshβz)Kυ(α12β2)+ib2γ2(α2sinhα2HβsinhβHcoshβzcoshα2z)Kυ(α22β2)+b1b2σ.
By taking the vertical derivative of Sz1, and Sz2, the vertical structure of stratification can be derived,
Szz1=b1γ1(α1sinhα1zα1sinhα1HsinhβHsinhβz)Kυ(α12β2)+b2γ2(α2sinhα2zα2sinhα2HsinhβHsinhβz)Kυ(α22β2),
Szz2=ib1γ1(α1sinhα1zα1sinhα1HsinhβHsinhβz)Kυ(α12β2)+ib2γ2(α2sinhα2HβsinhβHcoshβzα2sinhα2z)Kυ(α22β2)
withα1=i(σ+f)/Aυ,α2=i(σf)/Aυ,
β=iσ/Kυ,bj=g/2αj2Aυ,
γj=s/(αjAυsinhαjH+scoshαjH),j=1,2.

APPENDIX E

Tidal Water Motion

The semidiurnal (M2) tidal surface amplitude is almost uniform in the estuary, slightly increasing from 1.95 m at the estuarine mouth to 2.05 m at the head of the estuary (Fig. 11a). The phase relative to that at the mouth is less than 5° everywhere, indicating ηM2 changes almost without delay throughout the short estuary (Fig. 11b). Meanwhile, the amplitude of the depth-averaged semidiurnal tidal velocity uM2 monotonically decreases landward (Fig. 11c); and its phase (ϕM2, the phase difference between the depth-averaged uM2 and ηM2 at the mouth) is close to 90° throughout the estuary (Fig. 11d). The above features confirm the semidiurnal tide in the idealized estuary is almost a standing wave.

The amplitude of the depth-mean along-channel quarter-diurnal (M4) tidal velocities, |uM4|, is about one-third of that of the quarter-diurnal tidal velocities (Fig. 11e). The quarter-diurnal tidal currents can strongly influence the flow asymmetry, according to Friedrichs and Aubrey (1988). To measure this influence, the relative phase (Δϕ) between the semidiurnal and quarter-diurnal tidal velocities,
Δϕ=2ϕM2ϕM4,
is calculated. Figure 11f shows that, the quarter-diurnal tidal currents promote ebb dominance in the channel (90° < Δϕ < 270°) and flood dominance on the shoals (0° < Δϕ < 90°). A cross-sectional view of |uM4| and Δϕ (at x = 10 km) shows that uM4 tend to promote flood dominance near the bottom and ebb dominance in the upper layers where the quarter-diurnal tidal currents are strongest. The quarter-diurnal tidal currents are decomposed into different components due to different processes. As shown in Fig. E1, along-channel quarter-diurnal tidal velocities are dominated by TRFSD and EF, followed by NS, whereas that induced by ESCO is minor.
Fig. E1.
Fig. E1.

(left) Amplitude and (right) phase of the depth-averaged quarter-diurnal tidal flow due to (a),(b) eddy viscosity–shear covariance (ESCO); (c),(d) advection (AC); (e),(f) shear-free surface condition (NS); (g),(h) tidal return flow that compensates Stokes drift (TRF); and (i),(j) external quarter-diurnal tidal forcing (EF).

Citation: Journal of Physical Oceanography 51, 5; 10.1175/JPO-D-20-0146.1

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