Urban micro-tidal canals frequently suffer from severe hypoxia due to restricted hydrodynamic exchange and untreated discharges. Field monitoring during a 2022 mass fish mortality event at the Dongsam tidal canal revealed that during the ‘tidal window gap’—a hydraulic stagnation period required for passive tidal flushing—bottom-layer dissolved oxygen (DO) plummeted to a lethal 0.44 mg/L. To address the limitations of passive tidal exchange, this study proposes a conceptual hybrid water purification framework integrating active ecological interventions: wall-mounted spiral flow aeration for continuous oxygenation and vertical bio-curtains for pollutant interception. By synergizing fluid mechanics with ecological engineering, core design parameters were systematically derived: an effective mixing width (Weff = 2.2 h), longitudinal spacing (Ls = 13.6 × Weff ), an optimal root immersion ratio (Dr/h = 0.6), and climate-adaptive planting densities (ρp ≈ 2–32 plants/m2). Additionally, a corrosion-resistant FRP guide rail system was incorporated to facilitate autonomous adaptation to tidal fluctuations. The framework was conceptualized through a prototype design for the Dongsam canal and subsequently scaled to 15 international micro-tidal canals across diverse climatic zones. The optimized bilateral staggered configuration established a continuous 528 m2 ecological refuge, ensuring DO levels recover above the critical 3 mg/L threshold. Ultimately, this research presents a comprehensive methodological framework and a flexible engineering toolkit to guide water quality and ecological resilience enhancements in shallow urban waterways worldwide.
Hong et al. (Wed,) studied this question.