Title of article :
Quasi-hydrodynamic lubrication effect of clay particles on sand grain erosion
Author/Authors :
K.M. Barry، نويسنده , , R.J. Thieke، نويسنده , , A.J. Mehta، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Minor changes in the mass physical properties of submerged sand beds can have significant consequences relative to bed stability against
erosion. To examine the effect of small amounts of clay-sized particles in bed pore water on the critical shear stress tc for the erosion of
sand grains, flume experiments were carried out on the erosion of quartz sand beds impregnated with clay particles. Starting with no clay,
as the clay mass fraction j was increased, tc was found to decrease below the value for pure sand tco at j ¼ jm, then reverted to tco at
j ¼ jr and continued to increase above tco as j was increased further. Post-experimental analysis suggests that jr is the pore space-filling
fine sediment fraction above which sand erosion is significantly influenced by clay. In the range of j jm, slider-bearing type lubrication
due to the viscosity of the clay-laden interstitial fluid appears to govern the dependence of tc on j, mimicking Petroff’s law of thick-film lubrication.
When j < jm, as j decreases lubrication is increasingly curtailed by grain asperities, and tc reverts ultimately to tco at j ¼ 0. An
equation relating tc to j is proposed in analogy with the quasi-hydrodynamic Stribeck function for lubrication. The observed effect of clay
particles appears to be significant enough to require its consideration in coastal and estuarine sediment transport modeling. It may also be a factor
in the estimation of bed stability when biological activity in the benthic boundary layer introduces fine particles in clean sand beds.
Keywords :
Erosion control , coastal waters , estuaries , sediment mixtures , benthic boundary layer , clay particles , bed stability
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science