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An Approach to Improve Land–Water Salt Flux Modeling in the San Francisco Estuary
by
Hutton, Paul H.
, Roy, Sujoy B.
, Rath, John S.
in
Boundary conditions
/ Case studies
/ Drainage
/ Estuaries
/ Fluid mechanics
/ Integrated approach
/ Interfaces
/ Islands
/ Salinity
/ Salt
/ Time series
/ Water quality
/ Water shortages
2025
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An Approach to Improve Land–Water Salt Flux Modeling in the San Francisco Estuary
by
Hutton, Paul H.
, Roy, Sujoy B.
, Rath, John S.
in
Boundary conditions
/ Case studies
/ Drainage
/ Estuaries
/ Fluid mechanics
/ Integrated approach
/ Interfaces
/ Islands
/ Salinity
/ Salt
/ Time series
/ Water quality
/ Water shortages
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
An Approach to Improve Land–Water Salt Flux Modeling in the San Francisco Estuary
by
Hutton, Paul H.
, Roy, Sujoy B.
, Rath, John S.
in
Boundary conditions
/ Case studies
/ Drainage
/ Estuaries
/ Fluid mechanics
/ Integrated approach
/ Interfaces
/ Islands
/ Salinity
/ Salt
/ Time series
/ Water quality
/ Water shortages
2025
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An Approach to Improve Land–Water Salt Flux Modeling in the San Francisco Estuary
Journal Article
An Approach to Improve Land–Water Salt Flux Modeling in the San Francisco Estuary
2025
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Overview
In this case study, we used the Delta Simulation Model II (DSM2) to study the salt balance at the land–water interface in the river delta of California’s San Francisco Estuary. Drainage, a source of water and salt for adjacent channels in the study area, is affected by channel salinity. The DSM2 approach has been adopted by several hydrodynamic models of the estuary to enforce water volume balance between diversions, evapotranspiration and drainage at the land–water interface, but does not explicitly enforce salt balance. We found deviations from salt balance to be quite large, albeit variable in magnitude due to the heterogeneity of hydrodynamic and salinity conditions across the study area. We implemented a procedure that approximately enforces salt balance through iterative updates of the baseline drain salinity boundary conditions (termed loose coupling). We found a reasonable comparison with field measurements of drainage salinity. In particular, the adjusted boundary conditions appear to capture the range of observed interannual variability better than the baseline periodic estimates. The effect of the iterative adjustment procedure on channel salinity showed substantial spatial variability: locations dominated by large flows were minimally impacted, and in lower flow channels, deviations between baseline and adjusted channel salinity series were notable, particularly during the irrigation season. This approach, which has the potential to enhance the simulation of extreme salinity intrusion events (when high channel salinity significantly impacts drainage salinity), is essential for robustly modeling hydrodynamic conditions that pre-date contemporary water management infrastructure. We discuss limitations associated with this approach and recommend that—for this case study—further improvements could best be accomplished through code modification rather than coupling of transport and island water balance models.
Publisher
MDPI AG
Subject
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