Experimental Investigation of the Reynolds Shear Stress Exceedance Rate for the Injury and Disorientation Biocriteria Boundary in the Pool-Orifice and Vertical Slot Type Fishways

Fragmentation of rivers has a negative impact on river’s ecological status which can be improved by the construction of fishways next to obstacles in rivers that prevent a free migration. Flow field characteristics are key factors in the design process of hydraulically efficient fishways—flow and tu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gordon Gilja, Eva Ocvirk, Robert Fliszar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
ADV
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/16/7708
id doaj-186bff9ba625496b9c6f093fbf8a0d77
record_format Article
spelling doaj-186bff9ba625496b9c6f093fbf8a0d772021-08-26T13:31:05ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172021-08-01117708770810.3390/app11167708Experimental Investigation of the Reynolds Shear Stress Exceedance Rate for the Injury and Disorientation Biocriteria Boundary in the Pool-Orifice and Vertical Slot Type FishwaysGordon Gilja0Eva Ocvirk1Robert Fliszar2Faculty of Civil Engineering, University of Zagreb, Fra Andrije Kacica Miosica 26, 10000 Zagreb, CroatiaFaculty of Civil Engineering, University of Zagreb, Fra Andrije Kacica Miosica 26, 10000 Zagreb, CroatiaFaculty of Civil Engineering, University of Zagreb, Fra Andrije Kacica Miosica 26, 10000 Zagreb, CroatiaFragmentation of rivers has a negative impact on river’s ecological status which can be improved by the construction of fishways next to obstacles in rivers that prevent a free migration. Flow field characteristics are key factors in the design process of hydraulically efficient fishways—flow and turbulence patterns in a functional fishway allow fish to enter, progress through and exit with minimum time/energy expenditure. The aim of this paper is an experimental study of the flow field characteristics measured in the physical fishway model with the goal of providing information on the Reynold’s shear stress distribution that would facilitate their design in accordance with the environmental requirements. The focus of the research was on the nominally hydraulically efficient con-figuration pool-type fishways—pool-orifice and vertical slot. Fishway geometry was varied for bottom slope (7.5%, 10% and 12.5%), pool length (45 cm, 60 cm and 90 cm) and orifice size (8 × 8 cm, 10 × 10 cm and 12 × 12 cm) in a model scaled 1:3 to the prototype. Since Reynold’s shear stress has been identified as the main turbulent parameter affecting fish swimming performance and behavior, it is used as the basis for the analyses. The velocity data were collected with Vectrino ADV and processed in all three planes—streamwise, horizontal and vertical. Reynold’s shear stress data were analyzed according to the injury (>50 N/m<sup>2</sup>) and disorientation (>30 N/m<sup>2</sup>) biocriteria boundaries defined in the literature. The percentage of the flow field exceeding the boundaries were analyzed depending on the fishway geometry. The results obtained in this research suggest that the critical design parameter is the orifice size for the pool-orifice fishways and the pool length for the VS fishway. The Reynold’s shear stress is generally the highest in the bottom layer for pool-orifice fishways and the surface layer for vertical slot fishways.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/16/7708ADVturbulenceReynold’s shear stressphysical modelpool-type fishwaypool-orifice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gordon Gilja
Eva Ocvirk
Robert Fliszar
spellingShingle Gordon Gilja
Eva Ocvirk
Robert Fliszar
Experimental Investigation of the Reynolds Shear Stress Exceedance Rate for the Injury and Disorientation Biocriteria Boundary in the Pool-Orifice and Vertical Slot Type Fishways
Applied Sciences
ADV
turbulence
Reynold’s shear stress
physical model
pool-type fishway
pool-orifice
author_facet Gordon Gilja
Eva Ocvirk
Robert Fliszar
author_sort Gordon Gilja
title Experimental Investigation of the Reynolds Shear Stress Exceedance Rate for the Injury and Disorientation Biocriteria Boundary in the Pool-Orifice and Vertical Slot Type Fishways
title_short Experimental Investigation of the Reynolds Shear Stress Exceedance Rate for the Injury and Disorientation Biocriteria Boundary in the Pool-Orifice and Vertical Slot Type Fishways
title_full Experimental Investigation of the Reynolds Shear Stress Exceedance Rate for the Injury and Disorientation Biocriteria Boundary in the Pool-Orifice and Vertical Slot Type Fishways
title_fullStr Experimental Investigation of the Reynolds Shear Stress Exceedance Rate for the Injury and Disorientation Biocriteria Boundary in the Pool-Orifice and Vertical Slot Type Fishways
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Investigation of the Reynolds Shear Stress Exceedance Rate for the Injury and Disorientation Biocriteria Boundary in the Pool-Orifice and Vertical Slot Type Fishways
title_sort experimental investigation of the reynolds shear stress exceedance rate for the injury and disorientation biocriteria boundary in the pool-orifice and vertical slot type fishways
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Fragmentation of rivers has a negative impact on river’s ecological status which can be improved by the construction of fishways next to obstacles in rivers that prevent a free migration. Flow field characteristics are key factors in the design process of hydraulically efficient fishways—flow and turbulence patterns in a functional fishway allow fish to enter, progress through and exit with minimum time/energy expenditure. The aim of this paper is an experimental study of the flow field characteristics measured in the physical fishway model with the goal of providing information on the Reynold’s shear stress distribution that would facilitate their design in accordance with the environmental requirements. The focus of the research was on the nominally hydraulically efficient con-figuration pool-type fishways—pool-orifice and vertical slot. Fishway geometry was varied for bottom slope (7.5%, 10% and 12.5%), pool length (45 cm, 60 cm and 90 cm) and orifice size (8 × 8 cm, 10 × 10 cm and 12 × 12 cm) in a model scaled 1:3 to the prototype. Since Reynold’s shear stress has been identified as the main turbulent parameter affecting fish swimming performance and behavior, it is used as the basis for the analyses. The velocity data were collected with Vectrino ADV and processed in all three planes—streamwise, horizontal and vertical. Reynold’s shear stress data were analyzed according to the injury (>50 N/m<sup>2</sup>) and disorientation (>30 N/m<sup>2</sup>) biocriteria boundaries defined in the literature. The percentage of the flow field exceeding the boundaries were analyzed depending on the fishway geometry. The results obtained in this research suggest that the critical design parameter is the orifice size for the pool-orifice fishways and the pool length for the VS fishway. The Reynold’s shear stress is generally the highest in the bottom layer for pool-orifice fishways and the surface layer for vertical slot fishways.
topic ADV
turbulence
Reynold’s shear stress
physical model
pool-type fishway
pool-orifice
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/16/7708
work_keys_str_mv AT gordongilja experimentalinvestigationofthereynoldsshearstressexceedanceratefortheinjuryanddisorientationbiocriteriaboundaryinthepoolorificeandverticalslottypefishways
AT evaocvirk experimentalinvestigationofthereynoldsshearstressexceedanceratefortheinjuryanddisorientationbiocriteriaboundaryinthepoolorificeandverticalslottypefishways
AT robertfliszar experimentalinvestigationofthereynoldsshearstressexceedanceratefortheinjuryanddisorientationbiocriteriaboundaryinthepoolorificeandverticalslottypefishways
_version_ 1721194886597705728