scholarly journals PROBABILITY OF EXCEEDING THE CRITICAL SHEAR STRESS FOR SAND MOTION IN SPECIFIC WAVE AND CURRENT CONDITIONS

2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (33) ◽  
pp. 4
Author(s):  
Pierre-Yves Henry ◽  
Alf Tørum ◽  
Øivind Artsen ◽  
Dag Myrhaug ◽  
Muk Chen Ong

This study is focusing on the threshold of sand motion under random waves combined with a following current. The analysis is based on some flume experiments realized over a natural sand bed for different flow conditions (waves and currents). The main result comes as a map of the probability to exceed the threshold of sand motion, as a function of a wave and a current mobility parameter. These observations are compared to methods predicting the bed shear stress using an equivalent monochromatic wave, and links between the probability of exceeding the critical shear stress for initiation of sand motion and the calculated maximum bed shear stress are found.

Author(s):  
Dipankar Biswas ◽  
Steven A. Lottes ◽  
Pradip Majumdar ◽  
Milivoje Kostic

Bridges are a significant component of the ground transportation infrastructure in the United States. With about sixty percent of bridge failures due to hydraulic causes, primarily scour, application of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis techniques to the assessment of risk of bridge failure under flood conditions can provide increased accuracy in scour risk assessment at a relatively low cost. The analysis can be used to make optimum use of limited federal and state funds available to maintain and replace bridges and ensure public safety while traveling on the nation’s roads and highways during and after floods. Scour is the erosion of riverbed material during high flow conditions, such as floods. When scouring of the supporting soil around the piers and abutments of bridges takes place, risk of bridge failure increases. A simulation methodology to conservatively predict equilibrium shape and size of the scour hole under pressure flow conditions for flooded bridge decks using commercial CFD software was developed. The computational methodology has been developed using C++ to compute changes in the bed contour outside of the CFD software and generate a re-meshing script to change the bed boundary contour. STAR-CD was used to run the hydrodynamic analysis to obtain bed shear stress, and a BASH script was developed to automate cycling between computing bed shear stress with the CFD software and computing changes in the bed contour due to scour predicted using the computed shear stress for the current bed contour. A single-phase moving boundary formulation has been developed to compute the equilibrium scour hole contour that proceeds through a series of quasi-steady CFD computations. It is based on CFD analysis of the flow fields around the flooded bridge deck and shear stress computed at the bed modeled as a rough wall. A high Reynolds number k-ε turbulence model with standard wall functions, based on a Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) turbulence model, was used to compute bed shear stress. The scour sites on the bed were identified as those sites where the computed shear stress exceeded the critical shear stress computed from a published correlation for flat bed conditions. Comparison with experimental data obtained from the Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center (TFHRC), McLean, VA, USA, revealed larger discrepancies than anticipated between the bridge inundation ratio and the scour hole depth. Although scour hole slopes were small for the cases tested, a correction to critical shear stress to account for bed slope was also tested. It did not significantly improve the correlation between CFD prediction and experimental observations. These results may be a consequence of using only excess shear stress above critical as a criteria for scour when other physical mechanisms also contribute to the initiation of scour. Prediction of scour depth using federal guidelines over predicts scour depth by as much as an order of magnitude in some cases. Over prediction is acceptable for purposes of ensuring bridge safety. CFD methods for scour prediction can be a significant improvement of current methods as long as under prediction of scour depth is avoided. Conservative scour prediction using CFD methods can be achieved by using conservative values of parameters such as critical shear stress and effective bed roughness.


1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sunil K. Agrawal ◽  
Jatinder K. Bewtra

A modified approach to the design of grit chambers has been suggested in this paper. This approach is based on the concept of critical shear stress at the bed rather than mean velocity as used by T. R. Camp. It is recognized that the relationship between critical bed shear stress and mean velocity in a channel is not constant, as assumed by Camp, but varies according to the flow conditions. Critical bed shear stress values, obtained in the laboratory for different particle characteristics, are given in this paper. The proposed method should provide a more rational and a better design procedure for grit chambers. Key words: grit chambers, scouring, bed shear stress, initiation of motion.


2003 ◽  
Vol 34 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 125-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Milburn ◽  
B.G. Krishnappan

A large volume sample of river-bed cohesive sediment and water from Hay River, Northwest Territories, Canada was collected during a spring field program in 2000 as part of a study on under-ice movement of sediment just before breakup. Controlled laboratory experiments were subsequently conducted on the Hay River water/sediments in a rotating annular flume at Burlington, Ontario, Canada to better understand the deposition and erosion processes of cohesive sediment transport. The deposition experiments in the rotating flume confirmed that the Hay River sediment is cohesive and the critical shear stress for deposition and the rates of deposition are a function of bed shear stress and the initial concentration of the sediment in suspension. The erosion experiments provided quantitative data on the critical shear stress for erosion and the rates of erosion as a function of bed shear stress and the age of the sediment deposit. The erosion experiments also indicated that the growth of the biofilm had an influence on the erosion characteristics of the Hay River sediment. Based on the data from the rotating circular flume experiments, a modelling strategy is proposed for calculating the under-ice transport of the cohesive sediments in the Hay River.


2018 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 05058
Author(s):  
Michele Trevisson ◽  
Olivier Eiff

Gravel beds in river systems represent important aquatic habitats, which may be endangered by the introduction of large amounts of fine sediments. In order to better understand the interaction between fine sediments and coarse immobile beds in sediment supply-limited systems, a series of flume experiments was conducted. The main goal was to determine under what conditions erosion stops. The experiments were performed over a bed of regularly arranged spheres. Plastic particles were taken as sediment and the erosion was investigated under uniform flow conditions for variable bed shear stress conditions just above critical conditions. The system was observed to behave in two different ways: with higher bed shear stress fine sediments were completely washed out, whilst with lower stress the sediment bed reached a stable level just above the equator of the spheres.


Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 2346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiraga ◽  
Popek

Numerous approaches in sediment mobility studies highlighted the key meaning of channel roughness, which results not only from bed material granulation but also from various bed forms presence, caused by continuous sediment transport. Those forms are strictly connected with the intensity of particle transport, and they eventuate from bed shear stress. The present paper comprised of local scours geometric dimensions research in three variants of lengthwise development of laboratory flume in various hydraulic properties, both in “clear-water” and “live-bed” conditions of sediment movement. Lots of measurements of the bed conformation were executed using the LiDAR device, marked by a very precise three-dimensional shape description. The influence of the bed shear stress downstream model on scours hole dimensions of water structure was investigated as one of the key factors that impact the sediment transport intensity. A significant database of 39 experimental series, lasting averagely 8 hours, was a foundation for delineating functional correlations between bed shear stress-and-critical shear stress ratio and geometry properties of local scours in various flume development cases. In the scope of mutual influence of bed shear stress and water depth, high correlation coefficients were attained, indicating very good and good functional correlations. Also, the influence of bed shear stress and the total length of the scour demonstrated a high correlation coefficient.


2018 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 02003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabella Schalko ◽  
Lukas Schmocker ◽  
Volker Weitbrecht ◽  
Robert M. Boes

Large wood (LW) in rivers increases the flow variability and provides habitats for various species. During flood events, transported logs can accumulate at river infrastructures and increase the flood hazard. LW accumulations result in an upstream backwater rise and may increase local scour, for instance at bridge piers. Consequently, estimates of the resulting backwater rise and local scour are necessary to improve the flood hazard assessment. This study presents the findings of flume experiments with a movable bed on local scour and backwater rise due to LW accumulations. The approach flow conditions and the bed material were varied systematically for a specific LW accumulation volume. For all experiments, the initial condition for the bed material was defined as weak transport, since the bed shear stress was slightly below the critical bed shear stress for incipient motion. The inflow Froude number was identified as the governing parameter for backwater rise due to LW accumulations. The present study confirms the hypothesis that the resulting local scour reduces backwater rise. For the local scour, the unit discharge and the grain size diameter are the decisive parameters.


2007 ◽  
Vol 34 (10) ◽  
pp. 1312-1323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bahram Gharabaghi ◽  
Chris Inkratas ◽  
Spyros Beltaos ◽  
Bommanna Krishnappan

The Mackenzie River has several anomalous deep scour holes in a number of river channels in its delta. Proposed gas pipeline crossings have renewed interest in studying the stability of these scour holes. The main goal of this research project was to study flow velocity and bed shear stress distributions for a 30 m deep hole in the East Channel of the Mackenzie Delta as a first step toward assessing the stability of the scour hole and the risk of its migration during various flow conditions. In this study, a three-dimensional (3D) finite element flow model, FLUENT, using the renormalization group (RNG) k-ε turbulence model (where k is the turbulent kinetic energy and ε is the turbulence dissipation rate) was set up for the scour hole and calibrated using detailed measurements of 3D flow velocities, obtained with an acoustic doppler current profiler. The numerical model was then applied to predict flow velocity and bed shear stress distributions in and around the scour hole for three flow conditions (720, 1000, and 1400 m3/s). Results indicate that two vortices are formed in the river elbow above the scour hole. As the flow rate changed, the sizes of the vortices varied. The region upstream of the hole experienced the greatest magnitudes of bed shear stress.Key words: computational fluid dynamics, finite element, bed shear stress, deep hole, flow reversal.


2011 ◽  
Vol 1 (32) ◽  
pp. 59
Author(s):  
Alf Tørum ◽  
Øivind Arntsen ◽  
Colin Kuester

For different reasons oil/gas pipelines or parts of oil/gas pipelines have to be covered with rubble mounds. The question is then what the size of the stones/gravel in the mound should be to withstand waves and currents of the area. In order to obtain more information on the stability of gravel mounds over pipelines, laboratory tests in a wave/current flume have been carried out and are summarized herein. In addition data from other similar investigations elsewhere are discussed. A brief analysis of the stability of a flat gravel bed subjected to irregular waves has also been included, using the concept of the statistical distribution of the bed shear stress.


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