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Rheology of sediment transported by a laminar flow

Authors :
Houssais, M.
Ortiz, C. P.
Durian, D. J.
Jerolmack, D. J.
Source :
Phys. Rev. E 94, 062609 (2016)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Understanding the dynamics of fluid-driven sediment transport remains challenging, as it is an intermediate region between a granular material and a fluid flow. Boyer \textit{et al.}\citep{Boyer2011} proposed a local rheology unifying dense dry-granular and viscous-suspension flows, but it has been validated only for neutrally-buoyant particles in a confined system. Here we generalize the Boyer \textit{et al.}\citep{Boyer2011} model to account for the weight of a particle by addition of a pressure $P_0$, and test the ability of this model to describe sediment transport in an idealized laboratory river. We subject a bed of settling plastic particles to a laminar-shear flow from above, and use Refractive-Index-Matching to track particles' motion and determine local rheology --- from the fluid-granular interface to deep in the granular bed. Data from all experiments collapse onto a single curve of friction $\mu$ as a function of the viscous number $I_v$ over the range $10^{-5} \leq I_v \leq 1$, validating the local rheology model. For $I_v < 10^{-5}$, however, data do not collapse. Instead of undergoing a jamming transition with $\mu \rightarrow \mu_s$ as expected, particles transition to a creeping regime where we observe a continuous decay of the friction coefficient $\mu \leq \mu_s$ as $I_v$ decreases. The rheology of this creep regime cannot be described by the local model, and more work is needed to determine whether a non-local rheology model can be modified to account for our findings.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. E 94, 062609 (2016)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1509.08395
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.94.062609