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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Flow of variably fluidized granular masses across three‐dimensional terrain: 1. Coulomb mixture theory

Richard M. Iverson, +1 more
- 10 Jan 2001 - 
- Vol. 106, Iss: 1, pp 537-552
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TLDR
In this article, a depth-averaged, three-dimensional mathematical model that accounts explicitly for solid and fluid-phase forces and interactions was developed to predict motion of diverse grain-fluid masses from initiation to deposition.
Abstract
Rock avalanches, debris flows, and related phenomena consist of grain-fluid mixtures that move across three-dimensional terrain. In all these phenomena the same basic forces govern motion, but differing mixture compositions, initial conditions, and boundary conditions yield varied dynamics and deposits. To predict motion of diverse grain-fluid masses from initiation to deposition, we develop a depth-averaged, three-dimensional mathematical model that accounts explicitly for solid- and fluid-phase forces and interactions. Model input consists of initial conditions, path topography, basal and internal friction angles of solid grains, viscosity of pore fluid, mixture density, and a mixture diffusivity that controls pore pressure dissipation. Because these properties are constrained by independent measurements, the model requires little or no calibration and yields readily testable predictions. In the limit of vanishing Coulomb friction due to persistent high fluid pressure the model equations describe motion of viscous floods, and in the limit of vanishing fluid stress they describe one-phase granular avalanches. Analysis of intermediate phenomena such as debris flows and pyroclastic flows requires use of the full mixture equations, which can simulate interaction of high-friction surge fronts with more-fluid debris that follows. Special numerical methods (described in the companion paper) are necessary to solve the full equations, but exact analytical solutions of simplified equations provide critical insight. An analytical solution for translational motion of a Coulomb mixture accelerating from rest and descending a uniform slope demonstrates that steady flow can occur only asymptotically. A solution for the asymptotic limit of steady flow in a rectangular channel explains why shear may be concentrated in narrow marginal bands that border a plug of translating debris. Solutions for static equilibrium of source areas describe conditions of incipient slope instability, and other static solutions show that nonuniform distributions of pore fluid pressure produce bluntly tapered vertical profiles at the margins of deposits. Simplified equations and solutions may apply in additional situations identified by a scaling analysis. Assessment of dimensionless scaling parameters also reveals that miniature laboratory experiments poorly simulate the dynamics of full-scale flows in which fluid effects are significant. Therefore large geophysical flows can exhibit dynamics not evident at laboratory scales.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The mobility of long-runout landslides

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the apparent coefficient of friction (ratio of the fall height to the runout distance) commonly used to describe landslide mobility is physically meaningless.
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A model for the analysis of rapid landslide motion across three-dimensional terrain

TL;DR: In this article, a new numerical model for the dynamic analysis of rapid flow slides, debris flows, and avalanches has been developed, which is an extension of an earlier algorithm and is implemented using a nu...
Journal ArticleDOI

Flow of variably fluidized granular masses across three‐dimensional terrain: 2. Numerical predictions and experimental tests

TL;DR: In this paper, pore pressure distributions using an advection-diffusion model with enhanced diffusivity near flow margins are derived for 3D Coulomb mixtures. But, the model is not suitable for modeling 3D boundary surfaces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Positive feedback and momentum growth during debris-flow entrainment of wet bed sediment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use data from large-scale experiments to assess the entrainment of bed material by debris flows and find that entrainments are accompanied by increased flow momentum and speed only if large positive pore pressures develop in wet bed sediments as the sediments are overridden by debris flow.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The physics of debris flows

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple model that satisfies most of these criteria uses depth-averaged equations of motion patterned after those of the Savage-Hutter theory for gravity-driven flow of dry granular masses but generalized to include the effects of viscous pore fluid with varying pressure.
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