Environmental Hydraulics (EH) is the scientific study of environmental water flows and their related transport and transformation processes in natural water systems. This review provides some remarks about the historical development of EH throughout three different paradigms or ages, namely, the Public Health Age, the Water Quality Age, and finally the Integrated Environmental Hydraulics Age. We further evaluate how EH research has changed in the last 20 years through a bibliometric analysis of the proceedings of the International Symposium on Environmental Hydraulics (ISEH) and Environmental Fluid Mechanics (EFMC) journal articles conducted using Citespace and Leximancer. Authors and affiliations are analyzed to identify patterns of collaboration, followed by an analysis of the temporal evolution of the EFMC impact index as well as its highly-cited articles. Finally, the major EH topics are identified with a comparison between the topics extracted from the two different sources. As the EH field is becoming rapidly global, some topics were confirmed to have attracted more interest in EH such as Flow Condition, Numerical Modelling, Experimental Measurements. It is hoped that our findings could provide a reference for students, academics, and policy-makers related to EH.
With the rapid development of commercial aquaculture in recent decades, large numbers of submerged cages or pens are clustered in fish farms that are commonly located within inland lakes, reservoirs, and coastal embayments around the world. The submerged structures have significant influence on both the flow fields and mass transport processes in surrounding water bodies. While existing studies have concentrated mainly on the flow blockage effects produced by fish cages, the associated effect on near-field mass transport processes, important for pollution transport and dispersal, remains largely unclear. To address this knowledge gap, a CFD (computational fluid dynamics) model was established using OpenFOAM to investigate the wake characteristics and scalar transport processes through a fishing net panel, as representative of a key component of the fish cage or pen. In this model, the net panel was represented as porous media, and the finite volume method was applied to solve the governing flow equations with the standard k-ε model used for turbulence closure. Experimental data from previous studies were used to calibrate and validate the numerical model, which was applied to different scenarios over a range of net solidities and incoming flow velocities. Overall, the numerical model results demonstrated that porous media schematization could adequately reproduce the blocking effect from the net panel on the mean flow field, as well as the induced changes to scalar transport, with satisfactory accuracy. The flow velocity reduction across the net panel was found to strengthen with increasing net solidity and decreasing incoming velocity, while the scalar concentration decay tended to become enhanced when the incoming velocity was decreased. The lateral profile of the scalar concentration exhibited a self-similar Gaussian distribution with the spreading width of the plume reduced by increasing the incoming velocity. This lateral concentration distribution was minimally affected by the upstream scalar source location relative to the net panel, when adopting the current RANS and porous media modelling approach. The model results provide useful references for the assessment of the environmental impacts and carrying capacity of cage-based fish farming.
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