Hiroaki NAKAYA
Abstract
Sediment transport process in mountain streams has been studied chiefly in
the development of theoretical as well as experimental bed load equations with
difficult field direct sampling. Attempts have been made to utilize more indirect
but stable monitoring methods (hereafter gindirect method") in recently
years such as a hydrophone sediment discharge measuring system (hereafter ghydrophone
system") which requires a basic analysis of its sensitivity to stream flow
properties to be used for bed load estimation and analysis. Hydrophone systems
count the times that bed load sediments strike the acoustic sensor of the system.
Hydrophone systems make use of correlation among acoustic, flow discharge, and
sediment discharge aspects of hydro]sediment phenomenon. Groups of transported
bed load more than a certain velocity give kinetic energy as they clash to hydrophone
acoustic sensors, which gives rise to acoustic energy in the systems. The acoustic
energy is converted to electric signals upon some amplification. Electric signals
more than a certain threshold are then recorded as pulses. Recorded pulses are
therefore considered to be affected by grain and kinetic properties of stream
flow. The functional dependency of hydrophone pulses on stream flow warrants
careful examination when bed load discharge is estimated based on observed pulses.
In this study, the sensitivity of hydrophone pulses to grain and kinetic properties
was examined utilizing bed load direct sampling and flow discharge observation
conducted concomitantly in 100 and 200km2]scale river basins. Direct sampling
of bed load enables us to observe not only discharge volume per unit period
but also useful clues on bed load grain property. Numbers of grains in a unit
bed load volume can be estimated from the grain property. Bed load detection
rates were introduced methodically, which was nominally defined as the ratio
of pulses to the grain numbers caught by direct sampling.
Examination of the detection rates indicates that hydrophone pulses respond
to a grain group of more than 0.85 mm in diameter in observed cases. The detection
rates were observed to be strongly varied in a certain range of flow discharge.
The total number of pulses influenced by this sensitivity to flow was estimated
to be not more than a few percent in studied cases. Thus the flow sensitivity
of detection rates can be seen as limited in some cases. However, attention
needs to be paid for this detection rate variability when sediment transport
phenomenon is analyzed with hydrophone pulses.
Key wordsFsediment sampling, hydrophone, sensitivity, detection rate