Intercalibration of benthic flux chambers II. Hydrodynamic characterization and flux comparisons of 14 different designs
Journal article, 2005

We have compared 14 different sediment incubation chambers, most of them were used on bottom landers. Measurements of mixing time, pressure gradients at the bottom and Diffusive Boundary Layer thickness (DBL) were used to describe the hydrodynamic properties of the chambers and sediment-water solute fluxes of silicate (34 replicates) and oxygen (23 replicates) during three subsequently repeated incubation experiments on a homogenized, macrofauna-free sediment. The silicate fluxes ranged from 0.24 to 1.01 mmol m(-2) day(-1) and the oxygen fluxes from 9.3 to 22.6 mmol m(-2) day(-1). There was no statistically significant correlation between measured fluxes and the chamber design or between measured fluxes and hydrodynamic settings suggesting that type of chamber was not important in these flux measurements. For verification of sediment homogeneity, 61 samples of meiofauna were taken and identified to major taxa. In addition. 13 sediment cores were collected. sectioned into 5-10-mm slices and separated into pore water and solid phase. The pore water profiles of disolved silicale were used to calculate diffusive fluxes of silicate. These fluxes ranged from 0.63 to 0.87 mmol m(-2) day(-1). All of the collected sediment parameters indicated that the sediment homogenization process had been satisfactorily accomplished, hydrodynamic variations inside and between chambers are a reflection of the chamber design and the stirring device, In general. pump stirrers with diffusers give a more even distribution of bottom currents and DBL thicknesses than paddle wheel-type stirrers, Most chambers display no or low static differential pressures when the water is mixed at rates of normal Use, Consequently. there is a low risk of creating stirrer induced pressure effects on the measured fluxes. Centrally placed stirrers are preferable to off-center placed stirrers which are more difficult to map and do not seem to give any hydrodynamic advantages, A vertically rotating stirrer gives about five times lower static differential pressures at the same stirring, speed as the same stirrer mounted horizontally If the aim is to simulate or mimic resuspension at high flow velocities, it cannot be satisfactorily done in a chamber using it horizontal (standing) rotating impeller (as is the case for most chambers in use) due to the creation of unnatural conditions. i,e. large static differential pressures and pre-mature resuspension at certain locations in the chamber. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

OXYGEN-UPTAKE

flux incubations

comparative

hydrodynamic properties

PORE-WATER

FLOOR

EXCHANGE

SOLUTE TRANSPORT

INSITU

DIFFUSIVE BOUNDARY-LAYERS

DEEP-SEA

IN-SITU

calibration

SEDIMENT-WATER INTERFACE

benthic chambers

Author

Anders Tengberg

University of Gothenburg

Per Hall

University of Gothenburg

U Andersson

University of Gothenburg

Bengt Lindén

University of Gothenburg

O Styrenius

University of Gothenburg

G Boland

Minerals Management Service

F de Bovee

Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)

B. Carlsson

Chalmers

S Ceradini

CISE S.p.A.

A Devol

University of Washington

G. Duineveld

Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research - NIOZ

Jens-Uwe Friemann

Chalmers, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Water Environment Technology

R. N. Glud

University of Copenhagen

A. Khripounoff

IFREMER Centre de Brest

J. Leather

NCCOSC RDTE Division

P. Linke

Helmholtz

L. Lund-Hansen

Aarhus University

G. Rowe

Texas A&M University

P. Santschi

Texas A&M University

P. de Wilde

Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research - NIOZ

U. Witte

Max Planck Society

Marine Chemistry

0304-4203 (ISSN)

Vol. 94 1-4 147-173

Subject Categories

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.marchem.2004.07.014

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Latest update

9/15/2020