Project Details
Rheology of inertial particles by means of experimental observations and numerical simulations
Applicant
Professor Dr.-Ing. Bernhard Vowinckel
Subject Area
Fluid Mechanics
Geotechnics, Hydraulic Engineering
Geotechnics, Hydraulic Engineering
Term
since 2021
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 490753954
Understanding sediment transport in rivers, lakes and along the ocean floor is key to sustainable management of open water bodies and aquatic ecosystems. Prominent processes are river morphodynamics, turbidity currents, and tsunamis running up a beach. Predicting and managing these processes requires in-depth knowledge of the rheology to describe macroscopic properties of the fluid-sediment mixture. However, the constitutive laws to describe these processes have so far mostly been based on studies of dense suspensions of neutrally buoyant particles in either highly viscous shearing flows or at much larger flow rates where inertial effects play the dominant role. The transition between the two regimes, however, has not been investigated in a systematic manner yet, and, hence, remains only poorly understood. This may be problematic for the predictive modeling of situations that are more relevant for engineering practices and natural flows involving sediment transport. This transitional regime will be the focus of the present study and our objectives are twofold: First, the French and German partners aim to conduct a joint complementary campaign of state-of-the art sediment transport experiments and numerical simulations, respectively. The campaign will yield highly-resolved data of laminar pressure-driven shearing flows across an idealized sediment bed for a wide range of Stokes numbers as the ratio of competing inertial and viscous effects. In a second step, these data will be used to improve existing two-phase modeling approaches that have become popular for macroscopic sediment transport models.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
France, USA
Cooperation Partners
Professorin Dr. Pascale Aussillous; Professorin Dr. Élisabeth Guazzelli; Professor Dr. Eckart H. Meiburg