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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Research
Vol. 79 (2009), No. 4. (April), Pages 162-183
Research Articles: Clay Previous HitFlowNext Hit Phase Diagrams

A Phase Diagram for Turbulent, Transitional, and Laminar Clay Suspension Flows

Jaco H. Baas, James L. Best, Jeffrey Peakall, Mi Wang

Abstract

New phase diagrams for the dynamic structure of clay-laden open-channel flows are proposed. These diagrams can be used to distinguish between turbulent Newtonian, transitional, and laminar non-Newtonian Previous HitflowNext Hit behavior, on the basis of the balance between turbulent forces (approximated by the horizontal components of Previous HitflowNext Hit velocity and turbulence intensity) and cohesive forces (approximated by the suspended clay concentration and rheology). Stability regimes for five different Previous HitflowNext Hit types are defined using a comprehensive series of laboratory flume experiments at depth-averaged Previous HitflowNext Hit velocities ranging from 0.13 m s−1 to 1.47 m s−1, and at volumetric kaolinite clay concentrations ranging from 0.03% (= 0.8 g L−1) to 16.7% (= 434 g L−1). As clay concentration increases, five Previous HitflowNext Hit types can be distinguished: turbulent Previous HitflowNext Hit, turbulence-enhanced transitional Previous HitflowNext Hit, lower and upper transitional plug Previous HitflowNext Hit, and quasi-laminar plug Previous HitflowNext Hit.

The turbulent properties of transitional flows are shown to be considerably more complex than the common notion of gradual turbulence damping. Turbulence-enhanced transitional flows display higher turbulence intensity than turbulent flows of similar velocity, with such enhancement originating from development of a highly turbulent basal internal shear layer within ~ 0.01 m of the bed. In lower transitional plug flows, the basal internal shear layer separates a lower region of high vertical gradient in horizontal velocity and strong turbulence from an upper region of plug Previous HitflowNext Hit with a much gentler velocity gradient and lower turbulence intensity. Kelvin-Helmholtz shear instabilities within the highly turbulent shear layer are expressed as distinct second-scale oscillations in the time series of downstream velocity. Turbulence damping dominates upper transitional plug flows, because strong cohesive forces, inferred to be caused by gelling of the high-concentration clay suspension, start to outbalance turbulent forces. In quasi-laminar plug flows, gelling is pervasive and turbulence is fully suppressed, apart from some minor residual turbulence near the base of these flows.

With very few exceptions, all flows pass through the same development stages as clay concentration increases, regardless of their velocity, but the threshold concentrations for turbulence enhancement, gelling, and development of internal shear layers and plug flows are proportional to Previous HitflowNext Hit velocity. At Previous HitflowNext Hit velocities below ~ 0.5 m s−1, only low concentrations (< 0.75%) of kaolinite are required to induce transitional Previous HitflowNext Hit behavior, thus potentially affecting many slow-moving and decelerating clay flows in natural sedimentary environments. However, at Previous HitflowNext Hit velocities above 1 m s−1, clay concentrations of at least 6% are required in order for flows to enter the transitional Previous HitflowNext Hit phase, but even at these velocities the transitional Previous HitflowNext Hit phases make up a significant proportion of the Previous HitflowNext Hit phase space. By converting the experimental data to nondimensional Froude number (momentum term) and Reynolds number (cohesive term), it is shown that each boundary between the turbulent, transitional, and laminar Previous HitflowNext Hit phases can be described by a specific narrow range of Reynolds numbers. Within the duration of the experiments, settling of clay particles occurred only in plug flows of low Previous HitflowTop velocity (and low Froude number), when the flows lacked the strength to support the entire clay suspension load.


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