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Journal ArticleDOI

The motion of a finite mass of granular material down a rough incline

Stuart B. Savage, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1989 - 
- Vol. 199, Iss: -1, pp 177-215
TLDR
In this article, two similarity solutions are found for the motion of a finite mass of material released from rest on a rough inclined plane, and the linear stability of the similarity solutions is studied.
Abstract
Rock, snow and ice masses are often dislodged on steep slopes of mountainous regions. The masses, which typically are in the form of innumerable discrete blocks or granules, initially accelerate down the slope until the angle of inclination of the bed approaches the horizontal and bed friction eventually brings them to rest. The present paper describes an initial investigation which considers the idealized problem of a finite mass of material released from rest on a rough inclined plane. The granular mass is treated as a frictional Coulomb-like continuum with a Coulomb-like basal friction law. Depth-averaged equations of motion are derived; they bear a superficial resemblance to the nonlinear shallow-water wave equations. Two similarity solutions are found for the motion. They both are of surprisingly simple analytical form and show a rather unanticipated behaviour. One has the form of a pile of granular material in the shape of a parabolic cap and the other has the form of an M-wave with vertical faces at the leading and trailing edges. The linear stability of the similarity solutions is studied. A restricted stability analysis, in which the spread is left unperturbed shows them to be stable, suggesting that mathematically both are possible asymptotic wave forms. Two numerical finite-difference schemes, one of Lagrangian, the other of Eulerian type, are presented. While the Eulerian technique is able to reproduce the M-wave similarity solution, it appears to give spurious results for more general initial conditions and the Lagrangian technique is best suited for the present problem. The numerical predictions are compared with laboratory experiments of Huber (1980) involving the motion of gravel released from rest on a rough inclined plane. Although in these experiments the continuum approximation breaks down at large times when the gravel layer is only a few particle diameters thick, the general features of the development of the gravel mass are well predicted by the numerical solutions.

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Citations
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The physical character of subaqueous sedimentary density flows and their deposits

TL;DR: A simple classification of sedimentary density flows, based on physical flow properties and grain-support mechanisms, and briefly discusses the likely characteristics of the deposited sediments is presented in this paper.
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A model for the runout analysis of rapid flow slides, debris flows, and avalanches

TL;DR: In this paper, runout analyses are used for risk assessment and design of remedial measures against rapid landslides such as debris flows, debris avalanches, rockslide avalanches and large-scale liquefaction failure.
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Rheophysics of dense granular materials: Discrete simulation of plane shear flows

TL;DR: From those dilatancy and friction laws, the constitutive law for dense granular flows is deduced, with a plastic Coulomb term and a viscous Bagnold term, for the limit of rigid grains.
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Flows of Dense Granular Media

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetic theories for granular flow: inelastic particles in Couette flow and slightly inelastic particles in a general flowfield

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the flow of an idealized granular material consisting of uniform smooth, but nelastic, spherical particles using statistical methods analogous to those used in the kinetic theory of gases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Frictional–collisional constitutive relations for granular materials, with application to plane shearing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose constitutive relations and boundary conditions for plane shear of a cohesionless granular material between infinite horizontal plates, and show that not all the material between the plates participates in shearing and the solutions for the shearing material are coupled to a yield condition for the non-shearing material to give a complete solution of the problem.
Journal ArticleDOI

A theory for the rapid flow of identical, smooth, nearly elastic, spherical particles

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on an idealized granular material comprised of identical, smooth, imperfectly elastic, spherical particles which is flowing at such a density and is being deformed at a rate that particles interact only through binary collisions with their neighbours.
Book

Water Waves: The Mathematical Theory with Applications

J. J. Stoker
TL;DR: In this article, two-dimensional waves on a running stream in water of uniform depth were modeled as a moving pressure point, and the theory of the wave pattern created by a moving ship was proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Grain flow as a fluid-mechanical phenomenon

TL;DR: In this paper, the behavior of granular material in motion is studied from a continuum point of view, where individual grains are treated as the "molecules" of a granular "fluid" and the resulting equations are nonlinear and coupled.
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