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Journal ArticleDOI

Control of Bed Erosion at 60° River Confluence Using Vanes and Piles

TLDR
In this article, the authors used a distorted model with a non-uniform sediment of mean particle size d¯¯ 50672 ǫ = 0.28mm with a confluence angle of 60°.
Abstract
River confluences have complex hydrodynamics than ambient flows due to different flow characteristics of the two merging flows. Secondary circulation develops due to merging of two flows which leads to bed erosion. The eroded sediment gets deposited at various locations in the downstream of the confluence. It is reported in the literature that major reservoirs in India will lose 50% storage capacity by 2020 and reservoirs all over the world lose storage capacity by as much as 5% every year. In view of controlling bed erosion at the confluence, vane and circular pile models are used as scour mitigation structures and experimental results are presented. Experiments are performed in a distorted model with a non-uniform sediment of mean particle size d 50  = 0.28 mm with a confluence angle of 60°. Two different discharge ratios (Q r = ratio of lateral flow discharge to main flow discharge) of 0.5 and 0.75 are used with a constant flow depth (H m) of 5 cm in the main channel. Vanes of width 0.3H m (1.5 cm), thickness of 1 mm are placed at 15°, 30° and 60° vane angles with respect to main flow. Circular pile models of 8 and 12 mm diameter are also used. Two different spacing of 2H m and 3H m (10 and 15 cm) between the vanes or piles are used to perform the experiments. For Q r = 0.5 and 0.75 using vanes, scour depth reduces by 25 and 34%, respectively. When circular pile models of 8 and 12 mm are used, the scour depth reduces by 25, 38 and 27, 43%, for Q r = 0.5 and 0.75, respectively. The scour depth decreases with an increase of vane angle and pile diameter, but increases with an increase of spacing. Therefore, piles have better performance over vanes in reducing scour at the confluence.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparing the Scour Upstream of Circular and Square Orifices

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the scour pattern upstream of square and circular orifices with equal opening areas of 38.45 cm2 and found that the influence zone area upstream of the square orifice is 1.46 times larger than the circular orifice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Control of sediment inflow into a trapezoidal intake canal using submerged vanes

TL;DR: In this paper, experiments were conducted to control sediment entry into an intake channel using submerged vanes in a physical model with a rectangular mobile-bed main channel and a trapezoidal rigid-bed intake channel diverting at an angle of 45°.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving the Hydro-Morpho Dynamics of A River Confluence by Using Vanes

TL;DR: In this article, a 2D numerical model is used in simulating hydromorpho dynamics in the rivers confluence to mitigate the erosion and deposition zones by adopting vanes as control structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of scour depth around cross-vane structures using a novel non-tuned high-accuracy machine learning approach

TL;DR: In this article, the scour hole depth at the downstream of cross-vane structures with different shapes (i.e., J, I, U, and W) is simulated utilizing a modern artificial intelligence method entitled "Outlier Robust Extreme Learning Machine (ORELM)".
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Form roughness and the absence of secondary flow in a large confluence–diffluence, Rio Paraná, Argentina

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present results of a field-based study that details the bed morphology and 3D flow structure within a very large confluence-diffluence in the Rio Parana, Argentina, with a width:depth ratio of approximately 200.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flow and sediment dynamics in channel confluences

TL;DR: In this paper, a conceptual model is proposed for the hydromorpho-sedimentary processes in the Upper Rhone River, and compared to existing conceptual models for confluences with different characteristics, which is characterized by maximum velocities occurring near the bed, and a considerable increase in turbulent kinetic energy generated in the shear layer at the interface of the flows originating from the main channel and the tributary.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sediment Management with Submerged Vanes. I: Theory

TL;DR: Submerged vanes as mentioned in this paper are small flow-training structures (foils), designed to modify the near-bed flow pattern and redistribute flow and sediment transport within the channel cross section.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond peak reservoir storage? A global estimate of declining water storage capacity in large reservoirs

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimated the loss in reservoir capacity for a global data set of large reservoirs from 1901 to 2010, using modeled sediment flux data, and used spatially explicit population data sets as a proxy for storage demand and calculate storage capacity for all river basins globally.
Journal ArticleDOI

River‐Bend Bank Protection by Submerged Vanes

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that short, vertical, submerged vanes installed at incidence to the channel axis in the outer half of a river-bend channel significantly reduce the secondary currents and the attendant undermining and high-velocity attack of the outer bank.
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