A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Dune Contribution to Flow Resistance in Alluvial Rivers
One of the most relevant features of alluvial rivers concerns flow resistance, which depends on many factors including, mainly grain resistance and form drag. For natural sand-bed rivers, dunes furnish the most significant contribution and this paper provides an insight on it. To achieve this aim, momentum balance equations and energy balance equations are applied to free flow in alluvial channels, assuming hydrostatic pressure distribution over the cross sections confining the control volume, which includes a reference bed form pattern. The resulting equation in terms of energy grade accounts for an empirical bed form drag coefficient resulting from the actual flow pattern and bed form geometry. The model has been validated using a large selection of field data and it seems somewhat sensitive to the dune geometry and to the Nikuradse equivalent roughness, whereas it is shows greater sensitivity to the adopted grain surface resistance formula (e.g., Manning−Strickler formula).
Dune Contribution to Flow Resistance in Alluvial Rivers
One of the most relevant features of alluvial rivers concerns flow resistance, which depends on many factors including, mainly grain resistance and form drag. For natural sand-bed rivers, dunes furnish the most significant contribution and this paper provides an insight on it. To achieve this aim, momentum balance equations and energy balance equations are applied to free flow in alluvial channels, assuming hydrostatic pressure distribution over the cross sections confining the control volume, which includes a reference bed form pattern. The resulting equation in terms of energy grade accounts for an empirical bed form drag coefficient resulting from the actual flow pattern and bed form geometry. The model has been validated using a large selection of field data and it seems somewhat sensitive to the dune geometry and to the Nikuradse equivalent roughness, whereas it is shows greater sensitivity to the adopted grain surface resistance formula (e.g., Manning−Strickler formula).
Dune Contribution to Flow Resistance in Alluvial Rivers
Leonardo Schippa (author) / Silvia Cilli (author) / Paolo Ciavola (author) / Paolo Billi (author)
2019
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
Metadata by DOAJ is licensed under CC BY-SA 1.0
Uniform flow in alluvial rivers and canals
Engineering Index Backfile | 1934
|Uniform flow in alluvial rivers and canals
Engineering Index Backfile | 1933
|Friction factors in alluvial rivers
TIBKAT | 1988
|Flood control on alluvial rivers
Engineering Index Backfile | 1931
|Friction factors in alluvial rivers
UB Braunschweig | 1988
|