This research position is part of the NWO-funded
SOURCE program: Sand nOURisment strategies for sustainable Coastal Ecosystems. The SOURCE philosophy is that carefully planned sand nourishments in the present will create the required and desired resilient and dynamic multifunctional coastal landscapes of the future.
SOURCE will deliver the scientific knowledge, models and design tools to develop and evaluate nourishment strategies in a multi-stakeholder co-creation process. Our Living Labs are two sand nourishments along the Dutch coast. These will be co-designed, monitored and evaluated by the SOURCE consortium. There will be 12 PhD, Post-Doc and other researchers at 8 academic institutes in total. They will collaborate closely with 25 partners from government organizations, research institutes, nature organizations and industry.
Within the SOURCE program, your project aims to develop a detailed research model to describe intra-wave cross-shore sand transport and morphodynamics (e.g. OpenFoam). This depth-resolving 2DV model will be used to unravel controlling cross-shore sand transport processes at various scales, such as bottom boundary layer processes, vertical turbulence and sand mixing, and effects of wave breaking. The model will be validated using lab and field data, in particular from new wave flume experiments by a fellow SOURCE PhD. Finally, the research model will be used to inform the development of a more practical numerical model (e.g. Delft3D) that will developed within another SOURCE PhD project to predict nourishments’ lifetime, spreading and impacts on coastal state indicators.
Being part of the SOURCE team implies close interaction with your UT supervisors as well as fellow researchers within the consortium. Especially, close collaboration is foreseen with knowledge institute Deltares. Regular consortium meetings will accommodate knowledge exchange with our partners, increasing the relevance and impact of our research. Furthermore, you will present your work at (inter)national conferences and publish your findings in journal papers and a PhD thesis.