Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
671276 Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics 2009 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
We report experimental results related to the dam-break problem for viscoplastic fluids. Using image processing techniques, we were able to accurately reconstruct the free-surface evolution of fixed volumes of fluid suddenly released a plane. We used Carbopol Ultrez 10 as a viscoplastic material; its rheological behavior was closely approximated by a Herschel-Bulkley model for a fairly wide range of shear-rates. Varying the Carbopol concentration allowed us to change the yield stress and bulk viscosity. The yield stress ranged from 78 to 109 Pa, producing Bingham numbers in the 0.07-0.35 range. We investigated the behavior of a 43-kg mass released on a plane, whose inclination ranged from 0° to 18°. For each run, we observed that the behavior was nearly the same: at short times, the mass accelerated vigorously on gate opening and very quickly reached a nearly constant velocity. At time t = 1 s, independently of plane inclination and yield stress, the mass reached a near-equilibrium regime, where the front position varied as a power function of time over several decades. We did not observe any run-out phase, during which the mass would have gradually come to a halt. The similarity in the flow behavior made it possible to derive an empirical scaling for the front position in the form xf=t0.275(sin⁡α)1/3(sin⁡α)5/4, where α and t denote plane inclination and time, respectively, and which holds for sloping beds (α > 0).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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