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TRANSCRIPT
Sponsors and Supporting Institutions
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Institutional Support
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Contents
Welcome Address
Organization and Committees
General Conference Information
Presentation Guidelines
Conference Program at a Glance
Scientific Program: Monday, September 19
Scientific Program: Tuesday, September 20
Scientific Program: Thursday, September 22
Poster Presentations
Social Events
Technical-Tours on Wednesday, September 21
Local-Tours on Wednesday, September 21
Useful Information
Maps of Conference Facilities
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Welcome to the 13th International Symposium on RiverSedimentation at the University of Stuttgart
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On behalf of the en-tire Local Organiza-tion Committee, wewould like to expressour delight of havingyou here in Stuttgartfor the ISRS 2016. Itis our great pleasure to host the Sym-posium which is organized and esta-blished as a triennial event. Under theauspices of UNESCO-IRTCES (Inter-national Research and Training Cen-tre on Erosion and Sedimentation),the ISRS symposia have been suc-cessfully held in Beijing, China (1980),Nanjing, China (1983), Jackson, USA(1986), Beijing, China (1989), Karls-ruhe, Germany (1992), New Delhi, In-dia (1995), Hong Kong, China (1998),Cairo, Egypt (2001), Yichang, China(2004), Moscow, Russia (2007), Stel-lenbosch, South-Africa (2010) andKyoto, Japan (2013). Since the foun-dation of the „World Association forSedimentation and Erosion Research”(WASER) during the ninth symposiumin 2004, the ISRS serves as the offici-al symposia series of WASER.
Prof. Silke WieprechtHead of the OrganisationCommittee for the ISRS 2016
The symposium aims at providing aplatform for scientists, engineers andopinion leaders for an in-depth andstimulating exchange of information.The objectives are to develop su-stainable revitalization and manage-ment strategies that address theongoing negative effects of anthropo-genic activities whilst improving riversystems towards a healthy ecologicalstatus. The fundamental researchand understanding of interactive pro-cesses between water and sedimentsis as important as the sharing andexchange of knowledge in appliedprojects.
Sediment dynamics in fluvial systemsare worldwide of great ecological,economic and human-health-relatedsignificance. Appropriate manage-ment strategies are therefore neededto limit maintenance costs and to mi-nimize potential hazards on theaquatic and adjacent environment.Human intervention, ranging fromnutrient and pollutant release to phy-sical modifications, has a large im-pact on sediment quantity and qualityand thus on river morphology as wellas on ecological functioning. Truly
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nation of science, research and appli-cation results in a productive and in-spiring interaction.
Yours sincerely
Silke Wieprecht
understanding sediment dynamicsrequires as consequence a multidis-ciplinary approach.
The contributions presented at the13th International Symposium on Ri-ver Sedimentation (ISRS 2016,Stuttgart, Germany, 19-22 Septem-ber 2016) report recent accomplish-ments in the six main topics;
theoretical developments, numericalmodelling, experimental laboratorywork, field investigations and moni-toring as well as management me-thodologies. In addition to the sixmain topics we are proud to presentfive special sessions. We are plea-sed that the Federal Waterways En-gineering and Research Institute(BAW) and the German Federal In-stitute of Hydrology (BfG) are com-mitted in the special session onNavigation and River Morphology.Reservoir operators and hydropowercompanies have shown great inte-rest in the reservoir managementsession, and the presented measu-rement techniques play an importantrole for both in-situ and laboratoryapplication.
We are delighted that the universityprovides the infrastructure for theconference assuming the cross polli-
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Organization and Committees
Conference Chair
• Silke Wieprecht, University of Stuttgart
Email: [email protected]stuttgart.de
Local Organizing Committee
• Andreas Dittrich, Technische Universität Braunschweig
• Stefan Haun, University of Stuttgart
• Andreas Malcherek, Universität der Bundeswehr München
• Markus Noack, University of Stuttgart
• Holger Schüttrumpf, RWTH Aachen University
• Jürgen Stamm, TU Dresden
• Karolin Weber, University of Stuttgart
International Advisory Committee
• Robert M. Boes, Switzerland• Subhasish Dey, India• Giampaolo Di Silvio, Italy• Rollin H. Hotchkiss, USA• Pierre Y. Julien, USA• Bruce W. Melville, New Zealand• Anil Mishra, France• Mathias J.M. Römkens, USA• Manfred Spreafico, Switzerland• Hans D. Thulstrup, China• Leo C. van Rijn, Netherlands• Desmond E. Walling, UK• Zhaoyin Wang, China• Sam S.Y. Wang, USA• Ulrich C.E. Zanke, Germany
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• Jorge D. Abad, USA• Jochen E. Aberle, Norway• Mustafa S. Altinakar, USA• Aronne Armanini, Italy• Markus Aufleger, Austria• James E. Ball, Australia• Kazimierz Banasik, Poland• Alistair G.L. Borthwick, Ireland• Benoît X. Camenen, France• Roger A. Falconer, UK• Norbert Fenzl, Brasil• Rui M.L. Ferreira, Portugal• Ana Maria Ferreira da Silva, Canada• Naziano P. Filizola, Brasil• Heide Friedrich, New Zealand• Shoji Fukuoka, Japan• Marcelo H. García, USA• Valentin Golosov, Russian Federation• Helmut Habersack, Austria• Willi H. Hager, Switzerland• Heather Haynes, UK• Christopher S. James, South Africa• Sameh A. Kantoush, Japan• Pravin Karki, USA• Rebekka Kopmann, Germany• Stuart N. Lane, Switzerland• Cheng Liu, China• Gil M. Mahé, France• Juan P. Martín-Vide, Spain• Bijoy S. Mazumder, India• Hajime Nakagawa, Japan
• Ali A.S. Neyshabouri,Islamic Republic of Iran
• Nils R.B. Olsen, Norway• André Paquier, France• Pawel M. Rowinski, Poland• Nils Rüther, Norway• Nicole Saenger, Germany• Anton J. Schleiss, Switzerland• Andreas Schmidt, Germany• Thorsten Stoesser, UK• Stefan Vollmer, Germany• Roman Weichert, Germany• Volker Weitbrecht, Switzerland• Geraldo Wilson Júnior, Brasil• Farhad Yazdandoost,Islamic Republic of Iran
International Scientific Committee
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General Conference Information
Conference Facilities
Most confernce activities take place on the mainCampus of the University of Stuttgart in buildingV47. Here, parallel sessions take place in thelecture rooms 47.02, 47.03, 47.05, 47.06 and4.282. In addition, the lecture room 9.02 inbuilding V9 is used for the parallel sessions.
University of StuttgartCampus VaihingenPfaffenwaldring 4770569 Stuttgart, Germany
Symposium Office
All participants are requested to check in at the Symposium Office and pick uptheir name badge and conference package. Participants should wear their namebadge during the whole conference.
Opening timesSunday, September 18Monday, September 19Tuesday, September 20Thursday, September 22
Phone number Symposium Office+49 711 685 87998
Building V47 on Campus Vaihingen,University of Stuttgart
General Information
University of StuttgartCampus VaihingenPfaffenwaldring 970569 Stuttgart, Germany
You can find detailed maps of the conferencefacilities at the end of this program.
3:00 pm - 6:00 pm8:00 am - 5:00 pm8:00 am - 5:00 pm8:00 am - 1:30 pm
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Internet Access
During the conference you can connect your mobile devices with the Wi-Finetwork "konferenz" if you agree to the terms of the „User Regulations forDigital Information Processing and Communication Equipment (IaC) at theUniversity of Stuttgart (December 18, 2006)”.
The complete user regulations can be found here:http://www.unistuttgart.de/zv/bekanntmachungen/bekanntm_179engl.html
If you do not agree to the terms of this agreement, you may not use the Wi-Fisystem.
Please note, that the password changes each day as follows:
• 18.09.2016: 135-440-208-316• 19.09.2016: 738-593-358-291• 20.09.2016: 849-199-499-280• 21.09.2016: 846-746-529-762• 22.09.2016: 729-371-266-040
Questions and Information
You have questions about the conference or needinformation about the University and/or Stuttgart?Feel free to ask any person of the conference staff(persons in a green T-Shirt)!
General Information
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Presentation Guidelines
All presentations must be in English.Contributed talks, including questions and answers, should last 15 minutesat most.Speakers are requested to deliver their presentations (use the pdf orppt/pptx file format) to the student assistant in the lecture hall no later than10 minutes before the session starts (Please note that it is not possible touse your own computer).
The presenter will be allocated a poster board. Possible poster sizes areDIN A0 (841 x 1189 mm (width x height) or Arch E (36 x 48 inch (width xheight)) in portrait orientation.Please check your board number in the final program and attach your pos-ter to this board only.Your poster may be put up at the beginning of the symposium and remainfor the duration of the conference. If a presenter wishes to keep his/herposter, these should be collected no later than 5 pm on Thursday, Sep-tember 22, 2016.
The poster slam will be held directly after the keynote lecture by WeimingWu on Monday, September 19 at 11:30 am in room number V47.02.It is required to upload your slides prior to the keynote lecture in the sameroom. In case you have not uploaded your slides on time, you have topresent your poster without any visual support.Each presenter may talk for 2 minutes at most.For a smooth transition please be ready for your presentation.
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Oral Presentations
Poster Sessions
Poster Slam
General Information
11 Program at a Glance
Conference Program at a Glance
September 19 - 22, 2016
Time ThursdaySept. 22
Wed.Sept. 21
TuesdaySept. 20
MondaySept. 19
09:00
Technical/Local-Tours
10:00Coffee Break
A, B, C, SS3
Keynote:W. Wu
10:30
11:30Poster Slam
B, C, SS1, E,D, SS4
12:15Lunch
13:15B, C, E, D,
SS2WISA, B, A, F,SS1, SS5
A, B, C, SS3
15:00Coffee Break
15:30B, C, E, D,
SS2
WASERAssembly &Closing
WISA,B, C
17:30
Icebreaker19:00
Banquet
Keynote:D.M. Paterson
Keynote:B.W. Melville
Lunch Lunch
OpeningCeremony
Coffee Break Coffee Break
17:00
Coffee BreakCoffee Break
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• Sediment Sources and Management Strategies Influencing Sediment YieldA Integrated Sediment Management at the River Basin Scale
• Mechanics of Sediment Transport• Local Scour, Bank Erosion and Protection Measures
B Sediment Transport
• Measurement Techniques and Monitoring Strategies
• River Morphology and Morphodynamics• Numerical Modelling of Fluvial Processes
C River Morphodynamics
• River Training and Management
• Ecological Aspects of Hydraulic and Transport Processes• From Macro- to Microscale to Impact Stability
D Hydromorphology meets Ecology
• Morphology and Water Quality• Modelling Tools for River Habitat Management• River Restoration Measures
• Reservoir Sedimentation and Density Currents• Reservoir Management Strategies
E Reservoir Sustainability
• Competing Uses of Rivers• Assessment and Policy on Hydro-Environment
F Social, Economic and Political Aspects of Sediment Management
• Natural Hazards and Extreme Events
WISAWorkshop on International Sediment Advancements
SS 1 Hydropower and Sediment ManagementSS 2 Navigation and River MorphologySS 3 Innovative Measurement TechniquesSS 4 Sediment Transport in Fluvial, Estuarine and Coastal EnvironmentSS 5 Sustainable Land Management
Conference Topics
• Coupling of Watershed Processes with Stream Dynamics
Program at a Glance
13 Program at a Glance
Special Sessions
SS 1: Hydropower and Sediment ManagementReservoir sedimentation is one of the main challenges in dam engineering today.As a result of the construction of artificial barrages flow velocities decrease andsediments start to settle. These sediment depositions not only reduce the reser-voir volume, but may also block bottom outlets and/or enter the intakes, whichresults in abrasion of the turbine blades and in damages of hydraulic structures.The special session “Hydropower and Sediment Management” deals with sedi-mentation problems in hydropower reservoirs and management strategies tomitigate against sedimentation and to increase operation and lifetime of powerplants.
SS 2: Navigation and River MorphologySafety and ease of shipping traffic is the first priority on waterways. Artificial wa-terways such as channels are easy to maintain whereas navigable rivers are un-der permanent influence of natural processes. In order to optimize thehydraulic-morphological processes, certain measures have to be planned andimplemented. In this context, aspects of floodwaters, water supply managementand ecology for example have to be considered. Furthermore, the navigationitself influences morphological processes. The special session “Navigation andRiver Morphology” addresses the specific processes in waterways and gives theopportunity to present various methods which are applied to investigate and pre-dict the interactions of multiple influences, including short-term and long-termmorphological impacts.
SS 3: Innovative Measurement TechniquesAdvanced measurement devices and techniques are important to determine se-diment transport mechanisms and sedimentary processes in rivers and reser-voirs. An accurate evaluation of these processes in high temporal and spatialresolution is fundamental for understanding a fluvial system. This includes boththe quantification of suspended sediments and bed load transport as well asmorphological changes and morphologically relevant processes such as bed ar-mouring, colmation and resuspension. The special session “Innovative Measure-
14Program at a Glance
ment Techniques” has a particular focus on recent advances in the use of singleand combined measurement devices and techniques in open water environ-ments.
SS 4: SEDITRANS – Sediment Transport in Fluvial, Estuarine and CoastalEnvironmentSEDITRANS is a Multi-ITN (Multipartners Networks for Initial Training) under theMarie Curie Actions of the 7th Framework Programme. The research theme issediment transport in the fluvial, estuarine and coastal environment(http://www.seditrans.civil.upatras.gr/). This special session will accommodatecontributions that involve all scales of work pertaining to sediment and fluid me-chanics. These include Lagrangian and Eulerian grain-scale approaches andtheir upscaling to larger engineering scales, developed both experimentally andnumerically. Specific topics of interest include (but are not restricted to): mecha-nics of granular material, interaction between fluid flow and grain motion, sus-pended sediment, bed armoring, segregation and stratification, sediment budgetin rivers, estuaries and coastal reaches, morphology of singularities and localscour, insights on bedload and suspended load transport formulae, derivationand solution of conservation equations, and advances in numerical approachesfor sediment transport.
SS 5: Sustainable Land ManagementThe conversion of land for agricultural use is increasing rapidly. Therefore, thedevelopment and implementation of practical solutions for global and regionalchallenges regarding land use changes and the consumption of natural re-sources becomes more and more important. This special session deals with thechallenges of monocultures and land-use changes in monoculture dominatedareas as well as in arid areas with a high vulnerability. It has a special focus onsediment loss due to monocultures, on sustainable land management based oninter- and transdisciplinary approaches as well as on management strategies forsustainable irrigation concepts and on sustainable utilization of natural ecosys-tems.
15 Program at a Glance
Time
09:00 Opening CeremonyRoom 47.02
10:00
Keynote: Weiming WuRoom 47.02
10:30
11:30
12:15
13:15
15:00
15:30
Room47.03
Poster SlamRoom 47.02
Conference Lunch
B1
B2
Room47.05
C1
C2
Room47.06
E1
E2
Room4.282
D1
D2
Room9.02
SS2
SS2
Coffee breaksponsored by IUB-Engineering
17:00
Coffee breaksponsored by IUB-Engineering
Monday, September 19, 2016
Scientific Program
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Program Opening Ceremony
Welcome message from ISRS 2016 ChairProf. Dr.Ing. Silke Wieprecht (Professor of Universität Stuttgart)
Welcome message from the Rector of the University of StuttgartProf. Dr.Ing. Wolfram Ressel (Rector of Universität Stuttgart)
Welcome message from the Ministry of the Environment, Climate Protection andthe Energy Sector Baden-WürttembergMdgt Peter Fuhrmann (Head of Department Water and Soil)
Welcome message from the City of StuttgartDr. HansWolf Zirkwitz (Head of Office for Environmental Protection)
Welcome message from the President of WASERProf. Giampaolo Di Silvio (Professor of Universita di Padova, Italy)
Welcome message from IRTCESProf. Liu Guangquan (Deputy Director and WASER SecretaryGeneral)
Room 47.02
Musical FrameworkThe Academic String Quartet of the University of Stuttgart
Musical FrameworkThe Academic String Quartet of the University of Stuttgart
Program Monday, 9:00-10:00
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E1/E2 Reservoir SustainabilityD1/D2 Hydromorphology meets Ecology
B1/B2 Sediment TransportC1/C2 River Morphodynamics
Topics of the Parallel Sessions for Monday, September 19, 2016
Weiming Wu, Clarkson University, Potsdam, NY (USA)
Weiming Wu is Professor at Clarkson University, NY, USA. Hisresearch interests include sediment transport in rivers, estuari-es and coastal waters; surge and wave attenuation by vegeta-tion; dam/levee breaching; and pollutant transport. He hasdeveloped several empirical formulas for sediment settling,deposit porosity, movable bed roughness and non-uniform se-diment transport, as well as a number of one-, two- and three-
dimensional computational models for free surface flows, sediment transport,pollutants, aquatic ecosystems, vegetation effects and dam/levee breaching. Hepublished a book "Computational River Dynamics" through Taylor & Francis, UKin November 2007. He is a Fellow of ASCE, and a member of IAHR and WA-SER. He currently serves as an Associate Editor for ASCE Journal of HydraulicEngineering.
In his keynote "Advances and Challenges in Mixed Cohesive/Noncohesive Sedi-ment Transport Research", Prof. Wu will present a state-of-the-art review of re-cent advances in laboratory experiments, field measurements and computationalmodeling of mixed cohesive/noncohesive sediment transport.
Keynote Speaker:
SS2 Navigation and River Morphology
Program Monday
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Parallel SessionRoom 47.03
Monday 19, 13:15-15:00
Chair: Nakagawa H. and Itoh T.
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Discussion of the impact of pressure fluctuations on local scouringW. Schanderl, M. Manhart & O. Link
Numerical modelling of scour – the influence of small scalemorphological processesL. Zhou & R.J. Perkins
Numerical simulation of local scour around three circular cylinders instaggered arrayH.S. Kim, M. Park, I. Kimura, Y. Shimizu & M. Nabi
Contraction rate of the flow, velocities, river bed stratification impacton the scour at the guide banksB. Gjunsburgs & M. Bizane
Combination of permeable and impermeable spur dikes to reducelocal scour and to create diverse river bedA. Tominaga & S.H. Sadat
Experimental study on local scour protection of piers for HangzhouBay Bridge by using twisted duplex blocksZ. Li, Y. Shi, R. Wang, J. Zhang & J. Wang
Control of bridge abutment scour using triangular vanesM. ShafaiBejestan & N. Raee
B1
19
Parallel SessionRoom 47.05
Quasi-three dimensional computations for flows and bed variations incurved channel with gently sloped outer bankT. Sasaki & S. Fukuoka
Landslide dam breach during 2015 earthquake in Nepal:Computational modelling of hydraulic and morphological effectsS. Giri, M. Nabi, J.D. Bricker, B.R. Adhikari & W. Schwanghart
Long-term numerical investigations of the effects of trainingstructures in a river reach with ongoing river bed deepeningA. Kikillus, L. Seitz, S. Haun & S. Wieprecht
A novel engineering desilting measure – „auto-desilting gallery”S. Li, Q. Yi, W. Cheng & Q. Liu
Study for restoring bank protection functions of longitudinal dikesexisting in the river with alternate barsS. Kato, T. Gotoh & S. Fukuoka
Conceptual modeling of bank retreat processes in the UpperJingjiang ReachS.S. Deng, J.Q. Xia, M.R. Zhou & J. Li
Restoration of the Eggrank bend at the Thur River in Andelfingen ZHM. Mende, M. Müller, P. Sieber & M. Oplatka
Chair: Cao Y. and Västilä K.
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Monday 19, 13:15-15:00
C1
20
Room 47.06
Chair: Kantoush S. and Ehrbar D.
Development of a management strategy based on in-situ observationfor Agongdian ReservoirC.C. Li, Y.J. Tsai, T.H. Wu & H.C. Tai
Experiences of controlled sediment flushing from four alpinereservoirsM.L. Brignoli, P. Espa, S. Quadroni, G. Crosa, G. Gentili &
R.J. Batalla
The monitoring of empty flushing operation at Agondian Reservoir,Kaohsiung, TaiwanY.J. Tsai & C.C. Li
Controlling sediment flushing to mitigate downstream environmentalimpactsS. Quadroni, G. Crosa, S. Zaccara, P. Espa, M.L. Brignoli, G. Gentili
& R.J. Batalla
Density driven underflows with suspended solids in Lake ConstanceS. Mirbach & U. Lang
Hydrodynamic instabilities in shallow reservoirs: Implications forsediment managementY. Peltier, A. de Cuyper, S. Erpicum, P. Archambeau, M. Pirotton &
B. Dewals
Improving the RESCON approachN. Efthymiou, S. Palt, P. Pintz, P.K. Thapa, G.W. Annandale &
P. Karki
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Monday 19, 13:15-15:00
E1Parallel Session
21
Room 4.282
Effects of sediment bypass tunnels on sediment grain sizedistribution and benthic habitatsC. Auel, S. Kobayashi, T. Sumi & Y. Takemon
The effect to the river environmental preservation of artificial flood inSatsunai RiverY. Watanabe, K. Sumitomo, S. Yamaguchi & H. Yokohama
Current status, sources and effects of fine sediments in UpperAustrian streamsS. Höfler, C. Scheder, C. Gumpinger, B. Piberhofer & C. Hauer
Analysing sediment characteristics of the alpine River BrixentalerAche (Austria) including in-situ measurements of dissolved oxygenL. Seitz, M. Noack, S. Haun, R. Reindl, G. Senn & M. Schletterer
Coarse sand as a specific problem for aquatic ecosystems in granite-dominated landscapesS. Höfler, C. Gumpinger & C. Hauer
Correlation between the shelter of juvenile salmonids and bedsubstrateM. SzaboMeszaros, N. Rüther & K. Alfredsen
Flow patterns, turbidity and sediment size distribution on theLuneplate tidal polder, Lower WeserE. Kemayou Tchamako, B. Koppe & U. von Bargen
Chair: Dai C. and Schletterer M.
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Monday 19, 13:15-15:00
D1Parallel Session
22
Room 9.02
Chair: Söhngen B. and Wurms S.
Scour geometry and flow velocities induced by an experimental shippropeller jetF. NúñezGonzález, K. Koll, B. Söhngen & D. Spitzer
Turbulence based approach for the transported particle sizeconcerning ship induced propulsion fluxR. Zimmermann, J. Stamm, T. Beck & B. Söhngen
Analysis of sedimentation of theYangtze Estuary channel, ChinaX.P. Dou, Z.X. Jiao, X.Y. Gao, L. Ding & J. Jiao
Evolution characteristics of the north branch of theYangtze EstuaryX.Y. Gao, X.P. Dou, L. Ding, Z.R. Gao & J. Jiao
Adaptability of numerical model for siltation in the Yangtze EstuarychannelT.L. Li, L.M. Chen, X.Z. Zhang, W.Y. Zhang & X.Y. Gao
Back siltation in Bach Dang navigation channel, Nam Trieu Estuary,VietnamV.T. Nguyen, M.D. Do & M.T. Vu
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Monday 19, 13:15-15:00
SS2Parallel Session
23
Room 47.03
Chair: Zanke U. and Sun D.
15:30
15:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
16:45
Experimental investigation on local shear stress and turbulence inten-sity over a rough bed with and without sediment using LDA and PIVP. Lichtneger, C. Sindelar, H. Habersack, J. Kitzhofer & E.A. Prager
Near-bed turbulence characteristics in unsteady hydrograph flowsover mobile and immobile gravel bedsJ. Kean, A. Cuthbertson & L. Beevers
Turbulent hydrodynamics through cross-sections at upstream, interiorand downstream of sparse vegetation patch in open channel flowD. Pal, S. Maji, P.R. Hanmaiahgari, M.D. Bui & P. Rutschmann
Turbulent flow and its characteristics over submerged obstacle marksB.S. Mazumder & H. Maity
Analysis of the sediment hydrography by modeling hyper-concentrated flow and sediment transportY.Y. Chiu & K.C. Yeh
Simulation of sediment hyper concentration in the lower Yellow Riverusing variational data assimilation methodR. Lai, M. Wang, M. Wang & H. Wang
Monday 19, 15:30-17:00
B2Parallel Session
24
Chair: Weitbrecht V. and NunezGonzalez F.
15:30
15:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
16:45
Laboratory experiments on gravel deposit erosionF. Friedl, V. Weitbrecht & R.M. Boes
Numerical simulation of gravel deposit erosionL. Vonwiller, D.F. Vetsch & R.M. Boes
Laboratory experiments on the influence of the length of a sedimentreplenishment applied with alternated geometrical configurationE. Battisacco, M.J. Franca & A.J. Schleiss
Experimental study on sediment control function of river narrow-sectionC.H. Lin, C.L. Shieh, C.J. Liu, S.H. Lin & Y.J. Tsai
A physically-based model of individual step-pool stability in mountainstreamsC.D. Zhang, Z.L. Wang & Z. Li
Bed-slope-related diffusion of an erodible humpS. Maldonado, M.J. Creed & A.G.L. Borthwick
Monday 19, 15:30-17:00
C2Parallel SessionRoom 47.05
25
Room 47.06
Chair: Sumi T. and Quadroni S.
15:30
15:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
16:45
The aging of Japan’s dams: Innovative technologies for improvingdams water and sediment managementS.A. Kantoush & T. Sumi
Modelling deposition, consolidation and erosion of cohesivesediments in the Upper RhineT. Hoffmann, G. Hillebrand & M. Noack
Long term simulation of reservoir sedimentation with turbidunderflowsG. Petkovšek
Reservoir sedimentation issues in India as a part of Dam Rehabilitationand Improvement Project (DRIP): Field reconnaissance and modellingS. Giri, M. Nabi, P. CleyetMerle & B.R.K. Pillai
On the vertical turbulent interaction of non-Newtonian fluid mudO. Chmiel, A. Malcherek & M. Naulin
Designing reservoir sediment management alternatives withautomated concentration constraints in a 1D sediment modelS. Gibson & P. Boyd
Monday 19, 15:30-17:00
E2Parallel Session
26
Room 4.282
Chair: Gerbersdorf S. and Liu C.
15:30
15:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
16:45
Mechanics of biofilm-coated sediment transportH.W. Fang, H.M. Zhao, W. Cheng, M. Fazeli, Y.S. Chen, Q.Q. Shang,
G.J. He & L. Huang
The analysis of sediment diameter with biofilmG.J. He, H.W. Fang, Q.Q. Shang, F. Mahede & L. Huang
The role of surface adhesion in biostabilization processesM. Thom, H. Schmidt, S. Wieprecht & S.U. Gerbersdorf
Microbial biostabilization and flocculation – what can we learn forsediment transport modelling?S.U. Gerbersdorf, H. Schmidt, M. Thom & S. Wieprecht
Explicitly salinity and sediment concentration on flocculationprocesses in estuariesA. Mhashhash, B. BockelmannEvans & S. Pan
Analysis of tidal effects on heavy metal transport in coastal aquifersA. Tao, S.G. Liu, S. Lou, C.M. Dai, B. Tan, R.S. Chalov & S.R. Chalov
Monday 19, 15:30-17:00
Parallel Session
D2
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Chair: Stamm J. and Tujinder A.
15:30
15:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
16:45
German guidelines for designing alternative bank protectionmeasuresB. Söhngen, P. Fleischer & H. Liebenstein
The potential of alternative technical-biological bank protectionmeasures on federal waterways – an applied research approachK. Schmitt & L. Symmank
Tension between bridge and waterway in the middle of Yangtze Riverwith its countermeasuresD. Li & L. Chen
Sediment budget of the Rhine River as basis for optimizingnavigation along the Mittelrhein waterwayS. Vollmer, G. Hillebrand, J. Hoffman & S. Schriever
River Rhine between Mainz and Bingen – Morphodynamic analysis ofa navigational bottleneckS. Wurms
Design of bank protection for inland waterways with GBBSoft+C. Gesing, B. Söhngen & K. Kauppert
Monday 19, 15:30-17:00
SS2Parallel Session
Room 9.02
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Time
09:00 Keynote: David M. PatersonRoom 47.02
10:00 Coffee Breaksponsored by Hunziker, Zarn & Partner
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11:45
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Room47.03
Conference Lunch
WISA
WISA
Room47.05
B4
B5
Room47.06
SS1
B6
Room4.282
A1
C4
Room9.02
SS5
Coffee Breaksponsored by Hunziker, Zarn & Partner
B3 C3SS1
D3 SS4E3
F1
Program Tuesday
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
Scientific Program
13:45
17:00
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SS1 Hydropower and Sediment Management
D3 Hydromorphology meets EcologyE3 Reservoir Sustainability
B3/B4/B5/B6 Sediment Transport
WISA
C3/C4 River Morphodynamics
Topics of the Parallel Sessions for Tuesday, September 20, 2016A1 Integrated Sediment Management at the River Basin Scale
F1 Social, Economic and Political Aspects of Sediment Management
SS4 Sediment Transport in Fluvial, Estuarine and Coastal EnvironmentSS5 Sustainable Land Management
David M. Paterson is Professor of Coastal Ecology at the Uni-versity of St Andrews, Scotland. He is also Executive Directorof the Marine Alliance for Science and Technology for Scotland(MASTS), a national organization promoting interdisciplinarymarine science, and is a member of Marine Scotland’s ScienceAdvisory Board. In terms of research, he directs the SedimentEcology Research Group at the Scottish Oceans Institute who-
se work involves biodiversity, ecosystem function and ecosystem service relati-onships, global change biology and the effects of multiple stressors (acidification,temperature and hypoxia). He has a long record of examining interaction bet-ween physical drivers and the biologic mediation of depositional habitats, deve-loping new techniques to research these interactions, working in the laboratoryand in the field.
In his keynote “Form, function and physics”, Prof. Paterson will assess the stateof recent research on the physical and biological coupling in aquatic ecosystemswhile discussing the ecological and evolutionary concepts of niche constructionas well as classical and cooperative ecosystem engineering.
David M. Paterson, University of St Andrews, St Andrews (UK)
Keynote Speaker:
Program Tuesday
30
Room 47.03
Chair: Rüther N. and Schwarzwälder K.
Suspended sediment dynamics of an allogenic dryland river channelG.A. Yu, M. Disse & Z.W. Li
Suspended load monitoring for sustainable hydropower developmentM. Guerrero, A. Antonini, N. Rüther & S. Stokseth
Highly seasonal suspended sediment and bed load transportdynamic in tropical mountain catchmentsS.B. Morera, A. Crave & J.L. Guyot
Bedload monitoring in a steep alpine stream: Results from the 2014measurement campaignR. Rainato, L. Picco & L. Mao
Integrated investigation of space-time variability in bed load transportrates using remote sensingM. Bakker & S.N. Lane
Influence of high Paraná’s River dunes variability in Itaipu’s ReservoirsedimentationP.E. Gamaro, L.H. Maldonado, J.L. Castro & V.P. Bastolla
10:30
10:45
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
Tuesday 20, 10:30-12:15
B3Parallel Session
31
Room 47.05
Chair: James C. and Pisaturo G.
Formation of river dunes by measurement, linear stability analysisand simulation with Bmor3DP. Mewis
Numerical modeling of antidune formation and propagationN.R.B. Olsen
On the effect of different upstream schemes on the simulation of theantidunes propagationE. Rademacher & A. Malcherek
Computations on bedform by DEM-URANS coupling with two-wayapproachI. Kimura, K. Horiuchi & Y. Shimizu
Critical discharge of erosion-deposition process of mid-channel barhead in anabranching channelZ.W. Li, G.A. Yu & C.D. Zhang
Sensitivity of deposition and erosion to bed composition in theIffezheim reservoir, GermanyQ. Zhang, T. Speckter, R. Hinkelmann, G. Hillebrand, T. Hoffmann &
H. Moser
10:30
10:45
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
How fast evolve the river-bottom profile and grain-size composition atbasin scaleG. Di Silvio, M. Franzoia & M. Nones
Tuesday 20, 10:30-12:15
BParallel Session
C3
32
Room 47.06Parallel Session
Chair: Dewals B. and Peteuil C.
Field calibration of bedload monitoring system in a sediment bypasstunnel: Swiss plate geophoneI. Albayrak, M. Hagmann, C.R. Wyss & R.M. Boes
Improvement of a bedload transport rate measuring system insediment bypass tunnelsT. Koshiba, C. Auel, D. Tsutsumi, S.A. Kantoush & T. Sumi
Integrative monitoring approaches for the sediment management inalpine reservoirs: Case study Gepatsch (HPP Kaunertal, Tyrol)M. Schletterer, B. Hofer, R. Obendorfer,A. Hammer, M. Hubmann, R. Schwarzenberger, M.
Boschi, S. Haun, M. Haimann, P. Holzapfel, H. Habersack, B. Brock, B. Schmalzer& C. Hauer
Measuring sediment fluxes in periglacial reservoirs using watersamples, LISST and ADCPD. Ehrbar, L. Schmocker, D.F. Vetsch, R.M. Boes & M. Döring
Flow field and sediment flux measurements at alpine desandingfacilitiesC. Paschmann, J.N. Fernandes, D.F. Vetsch & R.M. Boes
Development of oblique flow in barrages due to shoal formationK. Mishra
10:30
10:45
11:00
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11:30
11:45
12:00
Tuesday 20, 10:30-12:15
SS1/E3
33
Room 4.282
Chair: Holuba K. and Haas C.
River restoration: The need for a better monitoring agendaM. Nones
River restoration in sand-dominated lowland streams – a comparisonof morphodynamic impacts and responseV. Berger, A. Niemann & C.K. Feld
Reconnection of the Danube floodplain channels as a vital step torestore river morphology and fluvial dynamicsK. Holubová, M. Čomaj & K. Mravcová
Application of the hydromorphological assessment framework Valmorph toevaluate the changes in suspended sediment distribution in the Ems EstuaryC. Borgsmüller, I. Quick & Y. Baulig
Reconciling the debate on the impact of vegetation density on riverchannel braidingI. Pattison & R. Roucou
10:30
10:45
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
Characterizing natural riparian plant stands for modeling of flow andsuspended sediment transportK. Västilä & J. Järvelä
Tuesday 20, 10:30-12:15
Parallel Session
D3
34
Room 9.02
Chair: Ferreira R. and Battisacco E.
Coupling of large eddy simulations with the level-set method for flowwith moving boundariesF. Kyrousi, A. Leonardi, F. Zanello & V. Armenio
River morphodynamics under the effect of flow variabilityB. Oliveira & R. Maia
A particle counter prototype and video imaging techniques forcalculation of bedload fluxesF. Antico, P. Sanches, L. Mendes, R. Aleixo & R.M.L. Ferreira
Numerical investigation on the effect of suspended sediment load onflow field around a cylinderT. Paone, R.M.L. Ferreira, A.H. Cardoso & V. Armenio
Impact of placer mining on suspended sediments in rivers of the Kamchatka Penin-sula (Russian Federation) and the Selenga River basin (Mongolia) and its modelingE. Promakhova & N.I. Alexeevsky
Failure by overtopping of earth dams: Novel methods to determinethe breach effluent hydrographS. Amaral, T. Viseu, J.E. Santos, A. Lopes, A.M. Bento, L. Caldeira,
R. Cardoso & R.M.L. Ferreira
10:30
10:45
11:00
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11:30
11:45
12:00
Tuesday 20, 10:30-12:15
SS4Parallel Session
35
Room 47.03
Chair: Di Silvio G.
Introduction to WISA Session:"Hydraulic, Morphological and Biological Interactions in SedimentManagement"G. Di Silvio, WASER
Eco-sedimentology: A new area in sediment studiesZ. Wang, IAHR
Changing perspectives on the suspended load of riversD. Walling, IAHS
Hydrological processes in soils of sloping lands as a basis forsediment production and sediment yieldI. Pla Sentis, CONSOWA
Developments in reservoir sediment managementR. Hotchkiss, UNESO ISI
13:15
13:20
13:45
14:10
14:35
Tuesday 20, 13:15-15:00
WISAParallel Session
36
Parallel Session
Chair: Kopmann R. and Vonwiller L.
Effect of proportion of wash load to suspended load on river erosionand depositionC.T. Liao, K.C. Yeh, G.H. Liu & K.W. Wu
Discharge coefficients derived from sediment concentration toestimate discharge across a Sabo damK. Kawaike, H. Nakagawa, N. Kim & H. Zhang
Study progress of bottom-block scour on Yellow RiverY. Cao, E. Jiang, J. Li & Q. Zhang
Comparison of capacity and non-capacity sediment transport modelsfor dam break flow over movable bedJ. Zhao, I. Özgen, R. Hinkelmann, F. Simons & D. Liang
Transport of sediment in the presence of stable clastM.S. Sulaiman, R. Zainal Abidin & S.K. Sinnakaudan
13:15
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14:15
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Estimated response of Nieuwe Waterweg Rotterdam to deepening ofthe navigation channelA.P. Tuijnder, L.M. Perk, R.C. Steijn, B.T. Grasmeijer, J. Adema,
N. Geleynse, J. Cleveringa & L.C. van Rijn
Tuesday 20, 13:15-15:00
Room 47.05B4
37
Room 47.06Parallel Session
Chair: Albayark I. and Paschmann C.
Sediment management for sustainable hydropower developmentM. Omelan, J. Visscher, N. Rüther & S. Stokseth
Ensuring sediment continuity through a reservoir: Challenges andmethodology applied to define favorable hydraulic scenariosC. Peteuil, D. Alliau, T. Frétaud, M. Decachard, S. Roux, S. Reynaud,
N. Boisson, A. Vollant & Y. Baux
HPP Vrhovo operation under reservoir sediment managementL. Javornik, A. Kryžanowski & M. Mikoš
3D fully coupled numerical modelling of local sediment flushing scourat dam bottom outlets for sustainable hydropower operationO. Sawadogo & G.R. Basson
Experimental analysis of the interaction between hydroelectric sluicegates and sediment transportG.R. Pisaturo, M. Righetti, F. Amante & E. Bigliotti
13:15
13:30
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14:15
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14:45
Challenges facing Atbara Dam Complex (ADC) operationmanagementA.A. Ahmed
Tuesday 20, 13:15-15:00
SS1
38
Room 4.282Parallel Session
Chair: Kawaike K. and Borgsmüller C.
Overlooked costs of dams: Barrier to sustainabilityM. George & R. Hotchkiss
Sediment management at Sukkur Barrage – How competing needsand uses of the structure impact the designS. Aziz, M. RocaCollell & I. Heijne
Responsible management of alpine rivers: The Arly Basin/Savoie,FranceP. Ergenzinger & C. de Jong
Development of sediment control structure for dam sedimentationcounter measurement approachJ. Zulfan, N.S. Slamet & A. Prasetyo
Impacts of recent climate and land use dynamics on spatial and temporal chan-ges of sediment budget and reservoir siltation in small agricultural catchmentsV. Belyaev & A. Malyutina
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Tuesday 20, 13:15-15:00
F1/A1
39
Room 9.02
Chair: Yazdandoost F. and Berger V.
Managing rubber plantations towards improved water protectionG. Langenberger, H. Liu, S. Blagodatskiy, G. Cadisch, M. Krauss,
J. Wang, T. Aenis, S. Min & H. Waibel
Mitigation of forest to rubber change impact on soil erosion andstream quality by integrated land managementH. Liu, X. Yang, S. Blagodatskiy, C. Marohn & G. Cadisch
Reduction of fine sediment infiltration into rivers by implementing riparianbuffer strips in an agricultural dominated area in Southwest ChinaL. Seitz, S. Wieprecht, M. Krauss, N. Azizi & H. Steinmetz
Dynamics of soil erosion in rubber plantations and its mitigation byherbicide managementH. Liu, S. Blagodatskiy & G. Cadisch
Research-praxis integration in South China – the rocky road to implementstrategies for sustainable rubber cultivation in the Mekong RegionT. Aenis, J. Wang, S. HofmannSouki, T. Lixia, G. Langenberger,
G. Cadisch, K. Martin, M. Cotter, M. Krauss & H. Waibel
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Tuesday 20, 13:15-15:00
SS5Parallel Session
40
Room 47.03Parallel Session
Chair: Hotchkiss R.
Influence of morphological changes on ecology: a cascade of scalesS. Wieprecht, LOC
A hydro-, morpho-, bio-dynamic model for long-term, basin-scale riversimulationsG. Di Silvio, WASER
Plenary Discussion G. Di Silvio,
Z. Wang,
D. Walling,
I. Pla Sentis,
R. Hotchkiss, S. Wieprecht
Tuesday 20, 15:30-17:00
15:30
15:55
16:20
WISA
41
Room 47.05
Chair: Vollmer S. and Friedl F.
15:30
15:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
16:45
Development of a bedload sensor for continuous measurement andits applicabilityT. Itoh, T. Nagayama, R. Utsunomiya, M. Fujita, D. Tsutsumi,
S. Miyata & T. Mizuyama
Effects of bed-load on flow resistance and stability in step-poolsystemsB. Hohermuth & V. Weitbrecht
Quartz silt depositionS. Capapé, J.P. MartínVide & F. Colombo
Processes and effects of reversing currents on the erosion stability ofwide-graded grain materialA. Schendel, N. Goseberg & T. Schlurmann
Tuesday 20, 15:30-17:00
Parallel Session
B5
42
Room 47.06
Chair: Boes R. and Okada S.
Riverbank erosion rates prediction incorporating soil erodibility andsoil properties relationship: Bernam River, Malaysia case studyS.L. Ibrahim, J. Ariffin & A. Saadon
Estimation for the riverbank collapse volume with sandy-riverbank inthe desert reach of the upper Yellow RiverA. Shu, X. Zhou, G. Duan, F. Li & S. Wang
River embankment failure and resultant flood and sediment inflowdischarges due to overtopping river flowH. Nakagawa, H. Mizutani, Y. Wang, K. Kawaike, O. Kitaguchi &
H. Zhang
Evolution of Modaomen Bar at Pearl River EstuaryY. He, C. Lu, J. Deng, Y. Yang & L. Yang
Impact of a single dam on sediment transport continuity in largelowland riversZ. Babiński & M. Habel
15:30
15:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
16:45
Tuesday 20, 15:30-17:00
B6Parallel Session
43
Room 4.282
Chair: Römkens M. and Efthymiou N.
15:30
15:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
16:45
Computational modelling of secondary flow on unstructured gridsM. Nabi, W. Ottevanger & S. Giri
Numerical modelling of the Danube river channel morphologicaldevelopment at the Slovak–Hungarian river sectionM. Lukac & K. Holubová
Two-dimensional river bed configuration analysis of the Hii River anddiversion channel flood in September 2013R. Akoh, S. Maeno, S. Hirashita, K. Yoshida & T. Matsumoto
Morphodynamic modelling of a meandering sand bed river usingDelft3DM.S. Banda, A. Dittrich & J. Pervez
Application of 2D numerical modelling to determination of sedimenttransport in a Mexican riverG. CardosoLanda
Numerical assessment of the interactions between hydrodynamics,bed morphodynamics and bank erosionE.J. Langendoen, M.E. Ursic, A. Mendoza, J.D. Abad, R. Ata,
K. El Kadi Abderrezzak & P. Tassi
Tuesday 20, 15:30-17:00
C4Parallel Session
44
Time
09:00 Keynote: Bruce W. MelvilleRoom 47.02
10:00Coffee Break
10:30
12:15
13:15
15:00
15:30
Room47.03
Conference Lunch
B8
WASER AssemblyRoom 47.03
Room47.05
C6
Room47.06
A3
Room4.282
SS3
Room9.02
Coffee Break
B7 C5 A2 SS3
Program Thursday
Thursday, September 22, 2016
Scientific Program
16:15 Closing CeremonyRoom 47.03
17:00
45
SS3 Innovative Measurement Techniques
A2/A3 Integrated Sediment Management at the River Basin ScaleB7/B8 Sediment TransportC5/C6 River Morphodynamics
Topics of the parallel sessions for Thursday, September 22, 2016
Bruce W. Melville is Professor of Civil Engineering at the Uni-versity of Auckland. He is a founding member of the Centre forInfrastructure Research and is Associate-Editor of the (ASCE)Journal of Hydraulic Engineering, has served on local and in-ternational research committees, and has been a member ofmany tribunals for water consent hearings. He received the2002 ASCE Hydraulic Structures Medal, in recognition of his
contributions in the field and was elected to fellowship of the Royal Society ofNew Zealand in 2006. In 2007, he received the R.J. Scott Medal from RSNZ forhis research contributions, followed by the Dobson Supreme Technical Award inTransportation Infrastructure in 2012. In 2011, he was promoted to DistinguishedFellowship of IPENZ and was awarded a Hood Travelling Fellowship.
In his keynote "Local scour at hydraulic structures", Prof. Melville will present re-cent research findings related to local scouring, where the relation between thedepth of local scour and its dependent parameters will be discussed. An empha-sis is given to the underlying physics of local scour formation and the generalknowledge limitations of the processes. The keynote focuses on dependent pa-rameters describing the flood flow and bed sediment characteristics, the geome-try of the hydraulic structure and the rate of development of local scour.
Bruce W. Melville, The University of Auckland, Auckland (New Zealand)
Keynote Speaker:
Program Thursday
46
Chair: Wilson Jun. G. and Hoffmann T.
Incipient motion for gravel particles in cohesive mixture of clay-silt-gravelU.K. Singh, Z. Ahmad & A. Kumar
A data-driven fuzzy approach to simulate the critical shear stress ofcohesive sedimentsA. Schäfer Rodrigues Silva, M. Noack, D. Schlabing & S. Wieprecht
Study on the incipient velocity of biofilm-coated sedimentL. Huang, H.W. Fang, Q.Q. Shang, Y.S. Chen & G.J. He
Investigation on sandy riverbank failure eroded by water level risingR. Arai, K. Ota, T. Sato & Y. Toyoda
Experimental investigation of a cantilever failure for cohesiveriverbanksS. Patsinghasanee, I. Kimura & Y. Shimizu
Experimental study on scouring characteristics of cohesive bank soilin the Middle Yangtze RiverQ.L. Zong, J.Q. Xia & Y. Zhang
Monitoring topography of laboratory fluvial dike models subjected tobreaching based on a laser profilometry techniqueI. Rifai, S. Erpicum, P. Archambeau, D. Violeau, M. Pirotton,
K. El Kadi Abderrezzak & B. Dewals
10:30
10:45
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
Thursday 22, 10:30-12:15
B7 Room 47.03Parallel Session
47
Room 47.05
Chair: BockelmannEvans B. and Nehlsen E.
Annual change of water environment and topographic feature aturban river mouthK. Uno & S. Kishimoto
Sediment transport and evolution at Pearl River EstuaryJ. Deng & H. Deng
Bed variation during floods in the Chikugo River Estuary withcomplex structures of bed layersY. Kaneko & S. Fukuoka
Dynamic state of river-mouth bar in the Yuragawa River and itscontrol under flood flow conditionsH. Miwa, K. Kanda, T. Ochi & H. Kawaguchi
Morphological development of tidal tributaries in relation to turbidityand sediment concentration of the main estuary riverE. Nehlsen & P. Fröhle
Study on sediment transport of silt coast by wave and tidal currentJ. Mu & C. Yin
Coastline change of theYellow River Delta since 1855S. Yu & S. Tian
10:30
10:45
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
Thursday 22, 10:30-12:15
C5Parallel Session
48
Parallel SessionRoom 47.06
Chair: Skripalle J. and Kuksina L.
More bed load in rivers. Achieving a sediment balance close to thenature state in the Canton of BernM. Pauli, L. Hunzinger & O. Hitz
Analyses on trends and reasons of runoff and sediment load ofYellow River stemH.L. Shi, C.H. Hu, A.J. Deng & Q.Q. Tian
Variability of total sediment supply of the Chao Phraya River,ThailandB. Bidorn, S.A. Kish, J.F. Donoghue,W. Huang & K. Bidorn
An overview of hydro-sedimentological characteristics of intermittentrivers in Kabul region of Kabul River basinN. Sadid, S. Haun & S. Wieprecht
Stream flow modeling for a karst basin using coupled hydrological-hydrodynamic models: Case study of Lijiang River, ChinaQ.F. Wu, Y. Cai, S.G. Liu, Y.M. Jiang, A.N. Makhinov &
A.F. Makhinova
Study on strategy of wide floodplain training in the Lower Yellow RiverJ. Li, E. Jiang & X. Zhang
Integrated sediment transport modelling for rivers feeding lakes andwetlandsF. Yazdandoost & N. Khorami
10:30
10:45
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
Thursday 22, 10:30-12:15
A2
49
Chair: Hillebrand G. and SzaboMeszaros M.
Comprehensive measurement techniques of water flow, bedload andsuspended sediment in large river using ADCP
S. Okada, A. Yorozuya, H. Koseki, S. Kudo & K. Muraoka
Suspended sediment measurements with multi-frequencybackscatter acousticsJ. Skripalle, T. Hies & H.H. Nguyen
Combining in-situ laser diffraction (LISST) and vibrating tube densimetryto measure low and high suspended sediment concentrationsD. Felix, I. Albayrak & R.M. Boes
Densitometric probe based on non-differential pressure: A monitoringtechnique for high suspended sediment concentrationsD. Petrovic, A. Marescaux, J.P. Vanderborght & M.A. Verbanck
Continuous grid monitoring to optimize sedimentation managementT. Van Hoestenberghe, R. Vanthillo, M. De Paepe, N. Dezillie &
N. Van Ransbeeck
10:30
10:45
11:00
11:15
11:30
11:45
12:00
Thursday 22, 10:30-12:15
SS3Room 4.282Parallel Session
50
Room 47.03
Chair: Olsen N. and Langendoen E.
Mathematical description of flow memory effects on graded bedloadK. Hassan & H. Haynes
Modeling of non-capacity bed load transport in swash zoneZ. He, L. Tan & P. Hu
Reliability analysis of a 2D sediment transport model: An example ofthe lower river SalzachF. Beckers, M. Noack & S. Wieprecht
Proposing BEHI-NBS method for the estimation of river bank erosionon a river in NepalS. Pakuwal & S. Panthee
Homogeneous two-dimensional Poissonian model applied to the suspendedmovement of pollutant and non uniform fine sediment in open channel flowG. Wilson Júnior & C.S.G. Monteiro
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Application of Euler-Euler method in estimation of hydraulicstructures scourSh. Basirat & S.A.A. Salehi Neyshabouri
Thursday 22, 13:15-15:00
B8Parallel Session
51
Parallel SessionRoom 47.05
Chair: Fang H. and Yi A.
Historical and current uses of the Morvan’s Rivers (central France):Impacts on bedload transport and fluvial morphologyL. Gilet, F. Gob, E. Gautier & C. Virmoux
Dynamics of sediment storage in non-alluvial channelsC.S. James
Features of recent scouring and silting of the river channel of theJingjiang River downstream of the Three Gorges ProjectY.H. Zhu, X.H. Guo, G. Qu, F. Tang & L.H. Gu
Analysis of the interaction between the Yangtze River and PoyangLake, China based on Chaos theoryJ. Hu, Z.L. Wang & Y. Lu
Effect of the Three Gorges Dam and other upstream factors on thehydrological conditions of Yichang reach, Yangtze RiverH. Liu & Y. Lu
Bedrock channel morphological modeling on the river in TaiwanK.W. Wu, K.C. Yeh, C.T. Liao & Y.G. Lai
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Recent channel adjustments in the Jingjiang Reach controlled byvarious boundary conditionsJ.Q. Xia, M.R. Zhou, S.S. Deng & J.Y. Lu
Thursday 22 13:15-15:00
C6
52
Parallel SessionRoom 47.06
Chair: Xia J. and Lichtneger P.
Mechanical effects of vegetation in soil conservation and soil erosionreductionP.Q. Xiao, W.Y. Yao, Z.Z. Shen & C.X. Yang
Erosion on irregular slope surface: A full N-S equation basednumerical studyY. An & Q.Q. Liu
Van Deemter’s analysis of drainage to incised ditches in lowlandareasM.J.M. Römkens
Suspended sediment yield transportation by rivers of the KamchatskyKrai into the Pacific OceanL.V. Kuksina & N.I. Alexeevsky
The International Sediment Initiative (ISI) and its case studiesC. Liu, D.E. Walling, M. Spreafico, J. Ramasamy, H.D. Thulstrup &
A. Mishra
Erosion risk mapping for Hulu Langat River basinR. Zainal Abidin, N. Yusoff, M.S. Sulaiman & T. Mohamed Mustafa
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Impact of sediment management on integrated water resourcesmanagementF. Yazdandoost & F. Farahani
Thursday 22, 13:15-15:00
A3
53
Parallel SessionRoom 4.282
Chair: Gjunsburgs B. and Aziz S.
UAV based determination of grain size distribution at River Jachen,GermanyC. Haas, P. Thumser & L. Seitz
Feasibility tests to airborne gravelometry for prealpine riversM. Detert, L. Kadinski & V. Weitbrecht
Experimental study on development and migration of sand waves in aflumeC. Liu, W.H. Cao, L. Xu, J. Lu & L. Liu
Bathymetry of Zipingpu Reservoir by earthquake and flood inducedturbidity currentsA. Ruidong, L. Jia & Y. Zhongluan
Estimation of sediment deposition in Koyna Reservoir by integratedbathymetric surveyR.A. Patil & R.V. Shetkar
13:15
13:30
13:45
14:00
14:15
14:30
14:45
Thursday 22, 13:15-15:00
SS3
54
Poster PresentationsLower Floor Building V47
Identifying the sources of fine sediment to quantify the success of sustainableflood risk strategiesS. Twohig & I. Pattison
Study on sediment regulation approaches of Liu RiverL. Lin, X. Guan & T. Yu
Contribution in the study of sediment transport in northern Algeria *M. Meddi
Application of airborne gamma-ray imagery to assist soil survey in the upperPasak basin, Thailand *R. Moonjun, D.P. Shrestha & K. Duangkamol
A. Integrated Sediment Management at the River Basin Scale
B. Sediment Transport
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Experimental study on energy dissipation and beach protection effects of a newtype of penetrating framesY.F. Xia, H. Xu, Z.M. Fu, K.H. Chen & F. Chen
Estimation of maximum local scour depth around submerged spur-dikeS.Y. Hao, Y.F. Xia & H. Xu
Erosion and seepage failure around sheet-pile using two-phase WC-SPHmodel *A.M. Abdelrazek, I. Kimura & Y. Shimizu
Study on the bed coarsening and limit scour depth of the lower reaches of theThree Gorges ReservoirJ.X. Mao & X. Geng
Observation evaluating water and sediment runoff at Sabo dam in Kiso River basinS. Matsuda, T. Nagayama, T. Ikeshima, K. Goto, Y. Nishi & T. Itoh
Sensitivity analysis of measured sediment fluxes in a reservoir *S. Haun & L. Lizano
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Comparison of acoustic backscatter to turbidity for suspended sedimentestimation in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta in California *M. Ozturk & P.A. Work
The influences of water-sediment conditions on the sediment delivery rateD. Zhandi, L. Qin, H. Haihua & J. Zuwen
The response of riverbed erosion and deposition adjustment to the flow andsediment process in the lower Yellow RiverX. Zhang, D.P. Sun, Y. Sun & M.X. Liu
Sediment transport along the Deepwater Navigational Channel of ChangjiangEstuary, ChinaS. Lou, S.G. Liu, G.H. Zhong & G.F. Ma
Sediment transport in the middle reach of the Huaihe RiverB. Yu, J. Ni, H. Zhou, J. Sui, P. Wu & R. Juepner
Study on sedimentation velocity in transition zoneY. Guo & L. Gao
Characteristics of sediment movement and river-bed morphology at mountainousstream confluence regionX.K. Wang, E. Huang, X.N. Liu, X.F. Yan & H.F. Duan
Research of bed load distribution density based on image recognitiontechnology *D.P. Sun, H. Chen, Y. Sun, A. Gao, M.J. Dong, L.Q. Han & M.X. Liu
Super Deltaflex – Advanced development of transit time acoustic flowmeasurement *W. Stedtnitz & T. Schott
State of the art on remote sensing methods for suspended sediment concentrationin inland coastal watersA.E. Holdefer & K. Formiga
Experiment for bed erosion focusing on combination of horizontal distance andoverlapping height between main and counter Sabo damH. Watabe, K. Kaitsuka, M. Sugiyama, T. Itoh, H. Muramatsu, T. Nagayama,
H. Ogawa, T. Miike, A.Miyamoto, Y. Yamada & T.Mizuyama
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Effect on bed load transport discharge of Chongqing reach by backwater of ThreeGorges Reservoir in upper Yangtze RiverX. Fu, S. Yang, Y. Chen, J. Hu, S. Tong & Y. Xiao
Variation in total sediment rate prediction using different fall velocitymethods *S.I. Waikhom & S.M. Yadav
Flow and riverbed erosion-deposition simulation around submerged water intakeZ.F. Cui & D.C. Hu
Distributional characteristics of sediment concentration in the lotus-root-shapecompound channelsZ. Ji, C.H. Hu & F. He
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C. River MorphodynamicsExperimental study on velocity pattern and bed morphology around a model patchof vegetationC. Liu, D. Wang, K. Yang & X.N. Liu
Experiments on the channel plane form with nodes and anti-nodes *S. Yamaguchi, Y. Watanabe & K. Sumitomo
Characteristics of flow and sediment at the confluences of mainstream andtributary of the upper reaches of the Yangtze RiverP.Y. Wang, L.F. Han, C.Y. Yang & T. Yu
Braided channel evolution in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze Riverafter operation of the Three Gorgers ReservoirS. Yao, G. Qu & H. Wang
Study on the flow around the Baguazhou Island in the lower reach of the YangtzeRiverD. Liang, X. Wang, P. Yu & H. Tang
A look to valley types developed along the Göksu River (between Mut and Silifke:Southern Turkey)A. Turan
A comparison of two total sediment transport models for rivers *V.K. Yadav, S.M. Yadav & S.I. Waikhom
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A cellular automata model for riverbed evolvementM.J. Dong
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D. Hydromorphology meets Ecology
Study on sediment desilting operation mode and structure layout of Pakistan Karothydropower projectJ. Zhao, X.N. Liu, B. Fan, G. Wei, M. Wang & Z. Jin
Sedimentation in rivers and reservoirs following the eruptions of KelutVolcano, Indonesia *F. Hidayat, P.T. Juwono, A. Suharyanto, A. Pujiraharjo, D. Sisinggih & D. Legono
Economic assessment of the effects of sediment replenishment to rivers and theeffectiveness of sediment managementK. Tomita, T. Homma & T. Sumi
Impact of biofilm on the sediment properties and its environmental effectsH.M. Zhao, W.H. Cao, L.Q. Tang, C.H. Wang, Y.H. Wang, D.B. Liu, C.S. Guo,J. Lu & Y.F. Zhang
Compensatory measures at a Heavily Modified Waterbody (HMWB) improve thehydromorphological quality, a practical example from the MoselleD. Gintz & Y. Baulig
Heavy metal concentrations and enrichment of sediment cores: Correlationbetween geochemistry and geoaccumulation indexF. Fernandes & C. Poleto
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Poster Presentations
* Attendees in the Poster Slam on Monday, September 19, 11:30-12:15
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Social Events
Icebreaker
On Monday, September 19, 2016, at5:30 pm, we would like to invite you toan Icebreaker Party in the main con-ference building V47. All participantsof the symposium are invited to joinand to get to know each other in aninformal setting while enjoying assor-ted drinks and snacks.
The Icebreaker is sponsored by
TIWAG Tiroler Wasserkraft AG.
Symposium Banquet
A Symposium Banquet will be held onThursday, September 22, 2016, at7:00 pm, in the "grand pump room" inBad Cannstatt. During the Symposi-um Banquet you will be offered an ex-quisite dinner buffet and a variety ofalcoholic and non-alcoholic bevera-ges. The evening's cultural highlight
will be the performance of the folkdance group "Frommern Schwäbi-scher Albverein". The SymposiumBanquet is included in the symposiumfee (except for the one-day studentregistration fee). Accompanying per-sons are welcome to participate theSymposium Banquet if they are regis-tered. For the Symposium Banquet
Address and directions
The "Kursaal Cannstatt" is located inStuttgart's municipality "Bad Cann-statt". It can be easily reached fromthe main station ("Hauptbahnhof").Take the S-Bahn to the main stationand change to subway U2 in the di-rection of "Neugereut". Get off at the9th stop named "Kursaal". It is only ashort walk to the location of the con-ference banquet. To get back to themain station take the subway U2 inthe direction of "Botnang". It runsevery 10 minutes until 8:00 pm andevery 15 minutes until 12:30 am.
Kursaal CannstattKönigsplatz 170372 StuttgartThe „grand pump room” (Kursaal Cannstatt) in
Bad Cannstatt © Horst Rudel
Social Events
formal wear is requested.
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Technical TourSchluchseewerk AG
Visit to the Schluchseewerk AG loca-ted in the south of the Black Forest.Presentation of the company’s hydro-power system. Guided tour of thepump storage system Säckingen in-cluding the upper reservoir, the ca-vern powerhouse and the outlet areainto the river Rhein. For lunch theSchluchseewerk AG will serve sand-wiches.Meeting time: 07:15 amMeeting point: Bus station loop "Uni-versität (Schleife)" on the CampusVaihingen in front of the CommundoHotel (see blue meeting point in map)
Technical Tour Iffezheim
Visit of the waterways and navigationadministration. Presentation on artifi-cial sediment feeding. Ride on ahopper barge to see an artificial sedi-ment feeding. Afterwards, a visit tothe run of river power station Iffez-heim managed by EnBW, with a gui-ded tour through the power house.For lunch the EnBW will serve sand-wiches.
Meeting time: 07:45 amMeeting point: Bus station loop "Uni-versität (Schleife)" on the CampusVaihingen in front of the CommundoHotel (see red meeting point in map)
Important Information for theTechnical Tours
For the technical tours it is absolute-ly mandatory to wear proper foot-wear (closed, sturdy shoes).Participants without appropriate foot-wear e.g. sandals, high heels, flipflops may be excluded from the tour.Certain sections of the tours will beoutside, therefore it is strongly re-commended to bring adequate clo-thing (for cold and rainy conditions)as well as sunscreen as the weathermay be unpredictable.
Technical Tours on Wednesday, September 21, 2016
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Local Tours on Wednesday, September 21, 2016
Local Tour Stuttgart
Guided city tour through the centre ofStuttgart in the morning followed bythe visit to the hydraulic laboratory ofthe Institute for Modelling Hydraulicand Environmental Systems on theCampus, including presentations andexplanations of ongoing experiments.Afterwards sandwiches will be servedfor lunch in front of the laboratory hall.In the afternoon the tour will visit thePorsche museum, not only known forthe car exhibition of Stuttgart's famouscar manufacturer but also an architec-tural highlight. There will be two diffe-rent meeting points in the morning:One on the campus and one in the ci-ty centre.
1. Meeting Point CampusMeeting time 1: 8:30 amMeeting point 1: S-Bahn station "Uni-versität" on the Campus Vaihingen infront of the conference building (seeyellow meeting point in map)
2. Meeting Point City CentreMeeting time 2: 9:00 amMeeting point 2: In front of the Touristinformation at the very beginning of
the "Königsstraße" which is Stuttgartsbig pedestrian shopping street startingjust opposite from the main station.
Local Tour Tübingen
After the visit to the hydraulic labora-tory of the Institute for ModellingHydraulic and EnvironmentalSystems, including presentations andexplanations of ongoing experiments,you will be driven to the beautiful me-dieval town of Tübingen to join a tra-ditional "Stocherkahnride" on theRiver Neckar. Sandwiches will beserved for lunch on board of the bar-ges. Afterwards you will be offered aguided city tour through the medievalcentre of Tübingen before the bus ta-kes you back to Stuttgart.
Meeting time: 10:00 amMeeting point: In front of the laborato-ry hall (see green meeting point inmap)
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Important Information for the Local Tours
The city tours and the “Stocherkahnride” will be outside, therefore it is stronglyrecommended to bring adequate clothing (for cold and rainy conditions) as wellas sunscreen as the weather may be unpredictable.
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Useful Information
University of Stuttgart
The main emphasis of the Universityof Stuttgart is on engineering andnatural sciences combined withhumanities and social sciences. Thisinterdisciplinary research creates aprestigious profile for the university.Its excellent position is reflected inboth its projects, sponsored by theexcellence initiative of the FederalGovernment and the States, the ex-cellence cluster „Simulation Techno-logy” and the graduate school„Advanced Manufacturing Enginee-ring”. Furthermore, the University ofStuttgart is currently supported withfour special research areas by Deut-sche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG(German Research Foundation), atrans-regional special research fieldas well as four transfer areas coordi-nating university. The ranking ofDeutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftDFG (German Research Foundation)and Centrum für Hochschulentwick-lung CHE (Centre for Higher Educati-on Development) regularly shows theUniversity of Stuttgart to be particu-larly strong in the field of research.And in terms of third party funds the
University of Stuttgart has been atthe very top nationwide for manyyears.
Dept. of Hydraulic Enginee-ring and Water ResourcesManagement
The department's particular strengthsinvolve both, fundamental and appli-cation-oriented research on topicsconcerning sustainable water re-sources development.One rather classical aspect dealswith design, construction, operationand surveillance of dams. Physicalhydraulic models as well as analyticalapproaches and structural numericalFE-models are applied to assess thereliability and safety of hydraulic
Conference building V47 on Campus Vaihingen,University of Stuttgart
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structures. In-depth examinations ofdams were carried out, containing hy-drologic, hydraulic and stability analy-sis as well as risk analysis. Riskassessment and risk management ispart of the department’s research.Another focus is on flood protection,an important feature in the manage-ment of river catchments. This inclu-des planning as well as operatingprotective dykes, reservoirs, and pol-ders. Additionally, numerical 1D and2D-simulations serve to predict inhigh resolution the spatial and tempo-ral distribution of a flood wave.Transport processes of particles andsediments have always been of parti-cular interest in the management ofwaterways ranging form sedimentati-on in reservoirs and harbours as op-posed to erosion in recessed riverstretches. Although sediments are of-ten associated with pollutants, theyare also vital to maintain ecologicalhealth and functions of rivers. In thedepartment, we have a unique ap-proach to account for the complexityof the processes involved in bedload/sediment dynamics that requiresmore than one discipline: engineeringscience is combined with biology,chemistry and physics to complementexperimental work with numerical mo-
delling (1D, 2D, and 3D). Innovativeresearch is conducted on biostabilisa-tion of fine sediments by microorga-nisms (bacteria, microalgae) as wellas on colmation of gravel beds by or-ganic material.Additional research is conducted inusing fuzzy approaches for habitat,macrofauna, vegetation, and floodplain modelling (e.g. CASiMiR). Themodels are constantly developed toobtain the best possible judgement onhabitat suitability for organisms thatare indicative for water quality. Thisinterdisciplinary approach ensures thedepartment produces cutting-edgemodels to address complexenvironments.
Useful Information
Hydraulic Laboratory of the Department ofHydraulic Engineering and Water ResourcesManagement
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Stuttgart
Stuttgart lies in a lush valley, nestlingbetween vineyards and thick woodlandon the River Neckar. With a populationof about 600,000, the capital of Ba-den-Wuerttemberg is the urban centerof south-west Germany.
The Stuttgart area has the reputationof being the 'cradle of the automobile',and visitors associate it primarily withtechnological innovation and thrivingindustry. This is mainly because of theUniversity of Stuttgart's most famousgraduate student: Gottlieb Daimler, theinventor of the automobile.
However, the Stuttgart region is notonly the home of large car companiesand research organizations but has awealth of historic buildings rangingfrom medieval castles and Baroquepalaces to magnificent royal resi-dences and picturesque ruins. Thereare no fewer than 19 mineral springsthat spout some 22 million liters of cry-stalline mineral water daily. Since so-me are attributed with healingproperties, there is a booming localspa industry. With its impressive car
museums, exclusive art exhibitions, itsfascinating history, famous architec-ture, and world-class ballet company,the Stuttgart region has cultural activi-ties for everybody, whatever their tas-tes and interests.
Stuttgart Marketing GmbH is the offici-al tourism partner of Stuttgart. Pleasevisit www.stuttgart-tourist.de/en formore information.
Those who are up for more can feelreassured: The most famous spots inGermany like Heidelberg, the Loreleyon the Rhine, Cologne Cathedral, andNeuschwanstein Castle are only a fewhours away.
We wish you an interesting and rewar-
Useful Information
Sepulchral Chapel on Wuerttemberg Mountain© 2013 Bauer GmbH & CO. KG
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ding ISRS 2016 - but we also hopethat you find time to enjoy some of thearea's attractions, whether cultural, ar-chitectural, musical, culinary...
In your conference bag you will findsome information with inspiring ideason what to do in Stuttgart in your freetime - Enjoy your stay and have agood time!
Cannstatter Volksfest
The Cannstatter Volksfest, by foreignvisitors also referred to as the Stutt-gart Beer Festival, will start on Sep-tember 23, 2016, spanning a periodover three weekends. Although theVolksfest is not strictly speaking aBeer Festival, it is considered to bethe second largest beer celebration inthe world after the Munich Oktober-fest.
Public Transportation
From Stuttgart main station, take theS-Bahn (local train, stationsmarked with the S-Bahn sign)S1, S2 or S3 in the direction Herren-berg, Flughafen/Airport, Vaihingen orFilderstadt and get out at the 4th stop"Universität". This takes about ten mi-nutes. Leave the S-Bahn station in thedirection marked with the exit sign"Universität"; when you reach the top,you will find the conference building infront of you: Pfaffenwaldring V47.
In case you have booked your accom-modation through the hotel depart-ment of Stuttgart-Marketing GmbHyou will receive a ticket for free publictransportation by email. Please makesure to print out this ticket as it is validthroughout the whole Stuttgart metro-politan area (VVS region) for the du-ration of your stay. It can be used toget from Stuttgart main station to thesymposium venue and hotel. Otherwi-se you need to buy and acitvate aticket for two zones before boardingthe train.
Stuttgart Schlossplatz (Castle square)© StuttgartMarketing GmbH
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Climate and Clothing
Stuttgart's climate is marked by itsposition in the wide Neckar basin,shielded by the Black Forest in theWest, the Swabian Alb in the South,the Schurwald in the East and theStromberg and Heuchelberg region inthe Northwest. The city's position hasa significant influence on all climaticelements like radiation, temperature,humidity, precipitation and wind.Stuttgart’s climate is mild with anaverage annual temperature of about10°C in the basin of the city and about8.4°C in the more elevated outskirtssituated about 400 m asl. Besides theUpper Rhine Valley, Greater Stuttgartis one of the warmest regions inGermany.September temperatures achieveaverage highs of 20°C during the dayand lows of 10°C generally shortlyafter sunrise. The daily meantemperature in September is 15°C.The average sunlight hours are 5.4 hand the monthly rainfall in Septembersums up to 62 mm in the long-termaverage. In mid-September sunrise isapp. at 7:00 am and sunset app. at8:00 pm.
Electricity
Electrical sockets (outlets) in Germanyare one of the two European standardelectrical socket types: The "Type C"Europlug and the "Type E" and "TypeF" Schuko. If your appliance's plugdoes not match the shape of thesesockets, you will need a travel plugadapter in order to plug in. Voltage:220-240 Volts
Currency
Germany uses the Euro as currency.Cash is all over accepted as methodof payment. Major credit cards (VISA,MasterCard, American Express,Maestro) are widely accepted, exceptin small stores or for only smallamounts.Foreign exchange can be performedin banks and larger post offices. ATMsare widely spread in the city and onthe University Campus.
Time
Local time in Germany is GMT +1(GMT +2 between April and October).
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Map of Vaihingen Main Campus
1. Building V47 - Opening Ceremony, Keynotes, Parallel Sessions, PosterPresentations, Poster Slam, Exhibitions, Lunch Breaks, Coffee Breaks,Closing Ceremony, Icebreaker, Conference Office
2. Universitätsstraße 34 - Commundo Tagungshotel
S-Bahn Stuttgart, Stop: "Universität"
Maps of Conference Facilities
Maps
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Ground Floor of Main Conference Building V47
(Rooms: 47.02, 47.03, 47.05, 47.06)
Map of Building V47 (Main Conference Building)
Maps
Maps of Conference Facilities
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Map of Building V47 (Main Conference Building)
Lower Floor of Main Conference Building V47
(Rooms: 47.02, 47.03)
Maps of Conference Facilities
Maps
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Directions to Room V4.282 and V9.02
Map of Building V9 with Room 9.02Direction to Room4.282
For room 4.282 pleasetake the elevator to the4th floor. When you getout of the elevator turnright. Room 4.282 is thelast room on the right.
Room 9.02 is located in building V9. This is to theleft as you exit the main symposium venue(Building V47). When you enter this buildingplease turn right, then turn left into the first aisle.Room 9.02 is the second room on the left.
Maps of Conference Facilities
Maps