Title: High Resolution Simulations of Gravity and Turbidity Currents
1High Resolution Simulations ofGravity and
Turbidity Currents
- Eckart Meiburg
- UC Santa Barbara
- Motivation
- Governing equations / computational approach
- Results
- - particle driven gravity currents
- - gravity currents down a slope
- - non-Boussinesq gravity currents
- - gravity currents with erosion and
resuspension - Summary and outlook
2Atmospheric dust storm
- Particles represent small
- mass fraction
- Large density ratio of
- particles/fluid
- Suspension mechanism?
Coast of Africa (NASA)
3Atmospheric dust storm
- Particles represent small
- mass fraction
- Large density ratio of
- particles/fluid
- Suspension mechanism?
Coast of Africa (NASA)
Mars (NASA)
4Sandstorms
5Avalanche
- Non-Boussinesq
- Formation
- Growth / Amplification
- Front velocity
- Particle-particle interaction
- Erosion / Resuspension
- Deposition
- Influence of bottom topography
- Runout length
6Turbidity current
- Underwater sediment flow down
- the continental slope
- Can transport many km3 of
- sediment
- Can flow O(1,000)km or more
- Often triggered by storms or
- earthquakes
- Repeated turbidity currents in the
- same region can lead to the
- formation of hydrocarbon
- reservoirs
- Properties of turbidite
- - particle layer thickness
- - particle size distribution
- - pore size distribution
- Turbidity current.
- http//www.clas.ufl.edu/
7Turbidite systems on the continental slope
Houston
Study area
Courtesy of F.A. Diegel
8Turbidity current (contd)
Var Fan, off Nice coast, caused in 1979 by
airport construction accident
9Framework Dilute flows
- Volume fraction of particles of O(10-2 - 10-3)
- particle radius particle separation
- particle radius characteristic length scale of
flow - coupling of fluid and particle motion primarily
through - momentum exchange, not through
volumetric effects - effects of particles on fluid continuity equation
negligible
10Moderately dilute flows Two-way coupling
- Mass fraction of heavy particles of O(10), small
particle inertia (e.g., sediment transport) - particle loading modifies effective fluid density
- particles do not interact directly with each
other - Suspension dynamics can be described by
- incompressible continuity equation
- variable density Navier-Stokes equation
(Boussinesq) - conservation equation for the particle
concentration field - ? dont resolve small scale flow field around
each particle, - but only the large fluid velocity
scales (SGS model)
11Moderately dilute flows Two-way coupling
(contd)
effective density
settling velocity
12Model problem
Lock exchange configuration
Dense front propagates along bottom
wall Light front propagates along top wall
13Past work
- Benjamin (1968)
- shape of energy-conserving gravity current head
- height of energy-conserving current ½ height
of lock - Shallow water theory
- Rottman Simpson, Keller Chyou
- Particle-driven currents
- Bonnecaze Huppert, Garcia Parker
- Non-Boussinesq currents
- Groebelbauer et al., Lowe et al., Birman
Meiburg - Numerical simulations
- Klemp et al., Härtel, Meiburg et al.,
Balachandar et al. - Reviews
- Simpson (1997), Rottman and Linden (2001)
14Numerical method
- Fourier spectral method in the streamwise and
spanwise - directions
- sixth order compact finite difference method or
spectral - element method in the vertical direction
- third order Runge-Kutta time stepping
- mostly equidistant grids
- up to 70 million grid points
15Results 3D turbidity current Temporal evolution
DNS simulation (Fourier, spectral element, 7x107
grid points)
- Necker, Härtel, Kleiser and Meiburg (2002a,b)
- turbidity current develops lobe-and-cleft
instability of the front - current is fully turbulent
- erosion, resuspension not accounted for
16Results 3D turbidity current - Frontal
instability
- Lobe-and-cleft instability (Simpson 72)
- Instability wavelength and growth rate agree
with linear theory - by Härtel et al. (2000)
17Results Sedimentation rate
Global sedimentation rate as function of time
- early and late times are governed by different
power law regimes
18Results Deposit profiles
Comparison of transient deposit profiles with
experimental data of de Rooij and Dalziel
(1998)
- - - - Experiment
- ___ Simulation
- simulation reproduces experimentally observed
sediment accumulation
19Results 2D vs. 3D simulations
- early times good agreement between 2D and
spanwise averaged 3D results - late times spanwise instabilities lead to more
rapid decay of 3D flow
20Results 2D vs. 3D - Front velocity, suspended
particle mass
- ____ 3D simulation
- - - - - 2D simulation
- 3D front propagates slightly faster
- particles settle out faster in the 3D flow
21Results 2D vs. 3D - Final deposit profile
- 2D and 3D simulations predict quantitatively
similar deposit profiles
22Results Mixing of interstitial fluid
- higher particle settling velocity results in
better mixing of interstitial fluid - reason by the time the more rapidly settling
particles have been deposited, - there is still sufficient kinetic energy
left to effect thorough mixing
23Gravity current moving down a slope
- Gravity current moving down a slope for Re
4,000.
24Front velocity
- Beyond a certain angle, the front velocity
reaches a quasisteady state, then jumps to larger
value
25Simple model for scaling
Late stages are dominated by two-layer structure,
not by front
2 layer approximation of density field (Thorpe
1967)
26Simple model comparison with simulation
Comparison of velocity at gate location with
model results
27Results Bottom wall shear stress
- wall shear stress distribution reflects
spanwise and streamwise flow structures - allows prediction as to where particle bed
erosion may occur
28Erosion, resuspension of particle bed
- Experimentally determined correlation by Garcia
Parker (1993) evaluates resuspension flux at the
particle bed - surface as function of
- bottom wall shear stress
- settling velocity
- particle Reynolds number
- Here we model this resuspension as diffusive flux
from the - particle bed surface into the flow
29Erosion, resuspension of particle bed (contd)
- based on experimentally measured correlation
between shear stress at the - surface of the bed and an effective
resuspension flux
30Erosion, resuspension of particle bed (contd)
deposition outweighs erosion decaying turbidity
current
erosion outweighs deposition growing turbidity
current
31Erosion, resuspension of particle bed (contd)
- multiple, polydisperse flows
- feedback of deposit on subsequent flows
- formation of ripples, dunes etc.
32Channelization by turbidity currents A
Navier-Stokes based linear instability mechanism
Focus on cross-section behind the front
- evaluate base flow from numerical simulations
or simplified analytical model - in order to obtain U(z), C(z)
- linearize 3D flow around 1D base state, obtain
eigenvalue problem
33Channelization by turbidity currents A
Navier-Stokes based linear instability mechanism
Instability mechanism
34Strong density difference Boussinesq vs.
non-Boussinesq
Momentum equation with Boussinesq approximation
Non-Boussinesq momentum equation
35Strong density difference
- small density contrast (Boussinesq case)
fronts are symmetric
- large density contrast (non-Boussinesq)
asymmetric fronts
36Strong density difference
- Lowe, Linden and
- Rottman (2004)
- experiments confirm asymmetric fronts for large
density contrast
37Strong density difference
- for non-Boussinesq flows the lobe-and-cleft
instability persists
38Strong density difference
- Theory based on two-layer shallow water equations
(Lowe, Rottman and Linden 2004) - different types of flows are possible, with or
without bore - front velocities and spatial distribution of
dissipation rates decide which solution forms in
reality - obtain detailed information on dissipation from
simulations
39Strong density difference
- density contours alone dont allow us to
determine nature of the flow
40Strong density difference
Light front velocity Comparison with
experimental data and theoretical value for
energy-conserving (Benjamin) front
- light front is approximately energy-conserving
for all density ratios
41Strong density difference
Dense front velocity Comparison with
experimental data and theoretical values for a
dissipative front without a bore
- dense front behaves dissipatively for all
density ratios
42Strong density difference
Global dissipation within the dense and light
fronts
- ____ light front
- - - - - dense front
- in the energy-conserving light front, the
dissipation does not depend on ? - in the dissipative dense front, the dissipation
varies with ?
43Gravity currents in stratified ambients
- generation of internal waves
- complex interaction of the current with the
stratified ambient
44Reversing buoyancy currents
- propagates along bottom over finite distance,
then lifts off - subsequently propagates along top
45Hazards posed by gravity and turbidity currents
Gravity currents may encounter underwater marine
installations
Constantinescu (2005)
- what forces and moments are exerted on the
obstacle? - steady vs. unsteady?
- erosion and deposition near the obstacle?
46Summary
- high resolution three-dimensional simulations of
gravity currents - detailed information regarding sedimentation
dynamics, energy - budgets, mixing behavior, dissipation
- important differences between 2D and 3D
simulation results - current extension to gravity currents flowing
down a slope, more - complex geometries, erosion and
resuspension, intrusions, - reversing buoyancy, submarine structures
- non-Boussinesq currents light front is
energy-conserving, - dense front is dissipative
47Acknowledgments
- National Science Foundation, NASA, BHP Billiton
Petroleum - V. Birman, F. Necker, C. Härtel, L. Kleiser, J.
Martin, - F. Blanchette, B. Hall, E. Gonzales, M.
Strauss, B. Kneller, - M. Glinsky
48University of California at Santa Barbara
- Founded 1944
- 20,000 students
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- Reputation for outstanding scientific research
and - interdisciplinary collaboration
49Mechanical and Environmental Engineering
- 500 undergrads
- 85 graduate students, 50 of them
international - 30 faculty members, 10 members of the NAE
50Research Areas
- Computational Science and Engineering
- Dynamics, Control, and Robotics
- Fluids and Thermal Transport
- Microscale and Nanoscale Engineering
- Solid Mechanics, Materials, and Structures