Title: Fluid Dynamics with Erosion
1Fluid Dynamics with Erosion
- Brandon Lloyd
- COMP 259
- May 2003
2Overview
- Sediment transport in open channels
- Bed-load transport
- Suspensed transport
- Sediment transport models
- Model used for this project
- Implementation issues
- Future work
3Sediment Transport
- Bed-load transport sliding, rolling, saltating
- Suspended transport sediment moves through the
fluid
Suspension
Sediment
Bed-load
Bed
4Bed-load transport
Once the forces acting on particles are
strong enough to intiate motion
Figure from Chanson, p. 200
particles slide, roll, and saltate down the
river bed at a steady rate.
Figure from Chanson, p. 180
5Suspended Transport
- Particles entrained at the bed-load layer
- Transported by convection, diffusion, and
turbulence
Suspension occurs here
Figure from Chanson, p. 200
6Sediment Transport Models
- Difficult problem most models are empirical.
- Usually make simplifying assumptions about flow.
- Many different formulas exist.
Table from Chanson, p. 198
7My Model
- Simplified version of model used in Haupt et al.
1999 - Transport occurs above critical velocity.
- Fluid has a transport capacity related to
velocity. - Concentration of sediment relative to capacity
determines change in terrain
8Implementation Issues
zero concentration
- Semi-Lagrangian advection causes mass loss in the
presence of eddies. - What to do at boundaries?
backward tracing does not see wall ? mass loss.
9Implementation Issues
- Semi-Lagrangian advection causes mass loss in the
presence of eddies. - What to do at boundaries?
Recycle concentration(limits the time-step)
10Results
- Nice swirls of sediment with erosion and
deposition at interactive rates (on a fast
machine ?.)
11Future Work
- Add bed-load transport
- Add instability based on slope
- Add variable material properties
- Fix spikes and improve robustness
- Better handling of velocities near heightfield.
- Experiment with and compare different
fluid/advection models - Add a free surface
- Implement on GPU
12References
- CHANSON, H. 1999. The Hydraulics of Open Channel
Flow An Introduction. Arnold. - HAUPT, B. J., SEIDOV, D. AND STATTEGGER, K. 1999.
SEDLOB and PATLOB Two numerical tools for
modeling climatically forced sediment and water
volume transport in large ocean basins. In
Computerized Modeling of Sedimentary Systems.
Springer-Verlag, Berlin. - WU, W., RODI, W. AND THOMAS, W. 2000. 3D numerial
modeling of flow and sediment transport in open
channels. Journal of Hydraulic Engineering, 4-15.