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Grain collapse complete

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Title: Grain collapse complete


1
The deposition of cohesive sedimentsLecture 16
Height in flow (z)
Newtonian fluid
?b 1030 kg/m3
?b 1100 kg/m3
Mobile fluid mud (flow)
?b 1200 kg/m3
Stationary fluid mud (bed)
  • Grain collapse complete
  • pore pressures unaffected by consolidation
    (secondary)
  • geostatic load increases linearly with depth
  • region of normal geotechnical studies
  • NOTE THE COMPLEX SEDIMENT/WATER INTERFACE

The collapse zone
Soil profile non-deforming cohesive bed
Friction angle (f)
Depth in sediment (z)
2
  • Stages of bed development
  • Newtonian turbid fluid
  • non-Newtonian fluid mud (mobile)
  • non-Newtonian fluid mud (stationary)
  • deforming cohesive bed (surface)
  • non-deforming cohesive bed
  • general bed structure
  • surface biofilm
  • pelletized layer
  • collapse zone
  • primary consolidating layer
  • secondary consolidating layer

Diatom layer
Pellet layer
Collapse zone
Laminated sediments
Bed shear strength or critical shear stress
depth
3
Turbid Newtonian fluids
  • Newtonian fluids stress strain rate at all
    levels of stress (viscosity 1.0 by definition)
  • the sediment has no significant effect on fluid
    viscosity, though density is affected
  • it is the region where Stokes Law and floccule
    settling are applicable
  • Stokes Law for C lt 300 mg/L) - most estuaries and
    coastal regions
  • floccule settling for 300 lt C lt 2000 mg/L - inner
    Bristol Channel
  • the bed shear stress may be calculated normally
    (Law of the Wall)
  • the boundary layer is assumed to be unaffected by
    turbidity
  • the turbulent structure is assumed to be
    unaffected by turbidity
  • (a heavily disputed subject !!!!)
  • (any level of turbidity makes the fluid
    non-Newtonian)

4
non-Newtonian fluids - mobile
Inertial force
  • Turbidity affects the fluid in two major ways
  • increases in the Richardsons number (the density
    gradient dominates the velocity gradient (the
    Monin-Obukhov length Ri 1.0)
  • increases in fluid viscosity (?) to result in
    either (1) shear thinning (thixotropic) or (2)
    shear thickening (dilatant) behaviour
  • the fluid possesses NO yield resistance to shear
    stress and hence is MOBILE.
  • The fluid flows down all gradients of the seabed
    infilling depressions and channels resulting in
    fluid mud pools (Bristol Channel on neap tides)
  • Rig gradient Richardson number
  • Rif flux Richardson number
  • Fd flux of sediment (-kdC/dz)
  • Where k eddy diffusivity of flow (0.0025Uh)
  • Fd gt 0.15 (supercritical flow collapse)
  • (Winterwerp et al., 1999)

Buoyant force
5
Concentration profiles
  • The concentration (C) profile in a water column
    is governed by
  • Fluid density (?)
  • Shear velocity (U)
  • Particle settling rate (Ws)
  • Fup upward flux of sediment
  • Fdown downward flux of sediment
  • Cm mass concentration at height z
  • Cb near bed concentration
  • m coefficient for hindered settling (1)
  • h total water depth
  • B Mass settlingmixing term
  • U peak tidal velocity

6
Concentration profiles
  • The (linear) concentration (C, kg/m3) profile in
    a water column may be predicted from
  • Rc ratio of near-bed concentration to that
    near water surface
  • If no data then Rc 3
  • and Csurf Cbed/3

7
non-Newtonian fluids - stationary
  • C in excess of 20 g/L
  • the fluid builds yield resistance to shear
    stresses (fluid or static)
  • shear stress stored elastically (elasticplastic
    ratio increasing)
  • fluid density lt 1200 kg/m3 (by definition)
  • pore pressures typically in excess of the
    geostatic load (?gz)
  • sediment particles buoyant, not in contact
    (fluid-supported)
  • often found in navigation channels of estuaries
    as organic-rich gels
  • turbidity maxima of mid-latitude estuaries

8
deforming cohesive beds
  • Defined by bulk densities in excess of 1200 kg/m3
  • they may grade from a fluid to a solid or show an
    abrupt lutocline
  • sediment particles are in contact the bed weight
    is solidly-transmitted
  • open floccules are collapsed and compressed into
    a sediment microfabric normal to the geostatic
    load (gravity)
  • a region of complex biological effects
    (bioturbation, biostabilization, adhesion)
  • a region of strong biochemical fluxes (oxygen,
    nutrients, metals)
  • the sediment is elasto-plastic (plastic
    dominated)
  • elastic part is the yield resistance
  • plastic part is strain during erosion

9
The rheology of muds how do they flow ?
Bingham plastic
Newtonian fluid
  • Rheogram (behaviour under flow)
  • shear stress (Pa)
  • strain rate (s-1)
  • yield strength cohesion erosion threshold
  • Newtonian fluid
  • Bingham plastic (ideal)
  • pseudo-plastics
  • shear thinning (thixotropic)
  • shear thickening (dilatant)

Shear thickening
Shear stress (Pa)
Shear thinning
Pseudo-plastics
Shear strain rate (1/s)
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