{"title":"Inertial effects in just-saturated axisymmetric column collapses","authors":"William Webb, Charles Heron, Barbara Turnbull","doi":"10.1007/s10035-023-01326-x","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>This work introduces a scaling analysis of sub-aerial axisymmetric column collapses of glass beads and Newtonian glycerol-water solutions mimicking some of the behaviours of debris flows. The beads were in a size range where their inertia partly decouples their collapse behaviour from the water column. Experiments explored a range of viscous, surface tension and particle inertia effects through systematic variation of particle size and fluid viscosity. Crucially a geotechnical centrifuge was used to access elevated effective gravitational accelerations driving the collapse, allowing field-scale viscous and surface tension effects to be replicated. Temporal pore pressure and run out front position evolution data was extracted using a pressure transducer and high speed imaging, respectively. A least-squares fitted scale analysis demonstrated that all characteristic dimensionless quantities of the acceleration phase could be described as a function of the column-scale Bond number <span>\\(\\text{ Bo }\\)</span>, the Capillary number <span>\\(\\text{ Ca }\\)</span>, the system size <span>\\(r^*\\)</span>, and the grain-fluid density ratio <span>\\(\\rho ^*\\)</span>. This analysis demonstrated that collapses as characterised by pore pressure evolution and front positions were controlled by the ratio of <span>\\(\\text{ Bo}/\\text{Ca}\\)</span>. This indicates that grain-scale surface tension effects are negligible in such inertial column collapses where they may dominate laboratory-scale granular-fluid flow behaviour where geometric similarity between grain and system size is preserved.</p><h3>Graphical abstract</h3>\n <figure><div><div><div><picture><source><img></source></picture></div></div></div></figure>\n </div>","PeriodicalId":582,"journal":{"name":"Granular Matter","volume":"25 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s10035-023-01326-x.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Granular Matter","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10035-023-01326-x","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This work introduces a scaling analysis of sub-aerial axisymmetric column collapses of glass beads and Newtonian glycerol-water solutions mimicking some of the behaviours of debris flows. The beads were in a size range where their inertia partly decouples their collapse behaviour from the water column. Experiments explored a range of viscous, surface tension and particle inertia effects through systematic variation of particle size and fluid viscosity. Crucially a geotechnical centrifuge was used to access elevated effective gravitational accelerations driving the collapse, allowing field-scale viscous and surface tension effects to be replicated. Temporal pore pressure and run out front position evolution data was extracted using a pressure transducer and high speed imaging, respectively. A least-squares fitted scale analysis demonstrated that all characteristic dimensionless quantities of the acceleration phase could be described as a function of the column-scale Bond number \(\text{ Bo }\), the Capillary number \(\text{ Ca }\), the system size \(r^*\), and the grain-fluid density ratio \(\rho ^*\). This analysis demonstrated that collapses as characterised by pore pressure evolution and front positions were controlled by the ratio of \(\text{ Bo}/\text{Ca}\). This indicates that grain-scale surface tension effects are negligible in such inertial column collapses where they may dominate laboratory-scale granular-fluid flow behaviour where geometric similarity between grain and system size is preserved.
这项工作介绍了空中下轴对称玻璃珠柱崩塌和牛顿甘油-水溶液的尺度分析,模拟了泥石流的一些行为。这些珠子的大小范围使它们的惯性在一定程度上使它们的坍塌行为与水柱分离。实验通过颗粒大小和流体粘度的系统变化,探索了一系列的粘性、表面张力和颗粒惯性效应。最重要的是,他们使用了一个岩土离心机来获得驱动坍塌的有效重力加速度,从而可以复制场尺度的粘性和表面张力效应。利用压力传感器和高速成像技术分别提取时间孔隙压力和出井前缘位置演化数据。最小二乘拟合尺度分析表明,加速阶段的所有特征无因次量都可以描述为柱级键数\(\text{ Bo }\)、毛细数\(\text{ Ca }\)、体系尺寸\(r^*\)和粒流密度比\(\rho ^*\)的函数。分析表明,以孔隙压力演化和前缘位置为特征的崩塌受\(\text{ Bo}/\text{Ca}\)比值控制。这表明,在这种惯性柱崩塌中,晶粒尺度的表面张力效应可以忽略不计,它们可能主导实验室尺度的颗粒流体流动行为,其中晶粒和系统尺寸之间的几何相似性得以保留。图形摘要
期刊介绍:
Although many phenomena observed in granular materials are still not yet fully understood, important contributions have been made to further our understanding using modern tools from statistical mechanics, micro-mechanics, and computational science.
These modern tools apply to disordered systems, phase transitions, instabilities or intermittent behavior and the performance of discrete particle simulations.
>> Until now, however, many of these results were only to be found scattered throughout the literature. Physicists are often unaware of the theories and results published by engineers or other fields - and vice versa.
The journal Granular Matter thus serves as an interdisciplinary platform of communication among researchers of various disciplines who are involved in the basic research on granular media. It helps to establish a common language and gather articles under one single roof that up to now have been spread over many journals in a variety of fields. Notwithstanding, highly applied or technical work is beyond the scope of this journal.