论文标题
跨风格和河流环境的沉积物传输启动,停止和夹带的物理
The physics of sediment transport initiation, cessation, and entrainment across aeolian and fluvial environments
论文作者
论文摘要
预测由于河流和风流引起的沉积景观的形态动力学,需要回答以下问题:是否足以发起沉积物运输的流量足以维持沉积物的运输,一旦开始启动沉积物,以及在饱和状态下流动的沉积物被运输了多少(即运输能力是什么)?在地貌和相关文献中,普遍的共识是,河流运输的起始,停止和能力以及风能运输的启动受到床矿的流体夹带的夹带,由层压力引起的流动力量造成的局部抵抗力,而易受影响则受到影响的影响。在这里,审查了沉积物传输启动,停止和容量的物理学,重点是在沉积物传输实验,两相流量建模以及颗粒物理学概念的融合中,最新的共识挑战性发展。突出显示的是密集的颗粒流量和沉积物传输之间的相似性,例如称为蠕变的超级颗粒运动(用于任意较弱的驾驶流)和抗床沉积物夹带的系统跨力网络;湍流夹带中湍流事件的大小和持续时间的作用;传统上,粒子床影响在触发河流运输中的夹带事件中的作用被忽视。以及跨风格和河流环境的运输阈值的共同物理基础。这为众所周知的盾牌图提供了一个新的灯光,其中流体夹带阈值的测量实际上可能对应于无夹带的戒烟阈值。
Predicting the morphodynamics of sedimentary landscapes due to fluvial and aeolian flows requires answering the following questions: Is the flow strong enough to initiate sediment transport, is the flow strong enough to sustain sediment transport once initiated, and how much sediment is transported by the flow in the saturated state (i.e., what is the transport capacity)? In the geomorphological and related literature, the widespread consensus has been that the initiation, cessation, and capacity of fluvial transport, and the initiation of aeolian transport, are controlled by fluid entrainment of bed sediment caused by flow forces overcoming local resisting forces, whereas aeolian transport cessation and capacity are controlled by impact entrainment caused by the impacts of transported particles with the bed. Here the physics of sediment transport initiation, cessation, and capacity is reviewed with emphasis on recent consensus-challenging developments in sediment transport experiments, two-phase flow modeling, and the incorporation of granular physics' concepts. Highlighted are the similarities between dense granular flows and sediment transport, such as a superslow granular motion known as creeping (which occurs for arbitrarily weak driving flows) and system-spanning force networks that resist bed sediment entrainment; the roles of the magnitude and duration of turbulent fluctuation events in fluid entrainment; the traditionally overlooked role of particle-bed impacts in triggering entrainment events in fluvial transport; and the common physical underpinning of transport thresholds across aeolian and fluvial environments. This sheds a new light on the well-known Shields diagram, where measurements of fluid entrainment thresholds could actually correspond to entrainment-independent cessation thresholds.