Module IV- Costal Engineering
Module IV- Costal Engineering
By
Dr. Dhruvesh Patel
Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Department
Pandit Deendayal Petroleum University
Coastal Engineering
• Costal : A coastal zone is the interface between the land and water.
• Shores that are influenced by wave processes (oscillatory flow
dynamics)
• Bays, and lakes, and estuaries, including that part of rivers subject to
the ebb and flow of the tide.
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-13-8926-9_1
Coastal Engineering
• Coastal engineering is a branch of civil engineering concerned with the
specific demands posed by constructing at or near the coast, as well as the
development of the coast itself.
• The hydrodynamic impact of especially waves, tides, storm
surges and tsunamis and (often) the harsh environment of salt seawater are
typical challenges for the coastal engineer
• Areas: Harbor works, navigation channel improvements, shore protection,
flood damage reduction, and environmental preservation and restoration.
• Requires the rational interweaving of knowledge from many technical
disciplines to develop solutions for problems associated with
• natural and human induced changes in the coastal zone
• the structural and non-structural mitigation of these changes
• the positive & negative impacts of solutions to problem areas on the coast.
Coastal Engineering
• The Coastal Engineer must consider the processes present in the area
of interest such as:
• Environmental processes
• Hydrodynamics processes
• Seasonal meteorological trends
• Sediment processes
• Geological processes
• Long-term environmental trends
• Social and political conditions
Waves in Shallow Waters
• When waves travel into areas of shallow water, they begin to be
affected by the ocean bottom. The free orbital motion of the water is
disrupted, and water particles in orbital motion no longer return to
their original position.
• As the water becomes shallower, the swell becomes higher and
steeper, ultimately assuming the familiar sharp-crested wave shape.
After the wave breaks, it becomes a wave of translation and erosion of
the ocean bottom intensifies.
Wave generation
• Ocean waves are mainly generated
by the action of wind on water. The
waves are formed initially by a
complex process of resonance and
shearing action, in which waves of
differing wave height, length,
period are produced and travel in
various directions. Once formed,
ocean waves can travel for vast
distances, spreading in area and
reducing in height, but maintaining
wavelength and period as shown in
Figure.
Wave deformation
• Wave deformation may occur due to
• Lateral diffraction of wave energy
• By the process of attenuation
• Air resistance encountered by the waves or by directly opposing winds
• By the tendency of the waves to overrun the currents.