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Published January 1985 | public
Journal Article

Flow regimes in inclined open-channel flows of granular materials

Abstract

Open-channel flows of fluids may be classified as supercritical or subcritical, depending on whether their average velocity ῡ is larger, equal to or smaller than the propagation rate of small disturbances √(gh) cos α (where g is the gravitational acceleration, h is the flow depth and [alpha] is the channel inclination). Typically, the flow type is classified by the magnitude of the Froude number, ῡ√(gh), relative to its value under critical conditions Fr_c = √(cosα). Supercritical and subcritical flow represent conjugate states of open-channel flow; that is, a given supercritical flow will transition via an hydraulic jump that will transition a subcritical flow back to its corresponding supercritical value. flow. (However, energy considerations prohibit a reverse hydraulic jump that will transition a subcritical flow back to its corresponding supercritical value.) Supercritical flows are unaffected by downstream conditions, as they move faster than the downstream information can propagate upstream. Subcritical flows are strongly affected by downstream conditions. If downstream conditions are relaxed, a subcritical flow may transition back to supercritical flow (although not its conjugate state) via an expansion wave progagating upstream. The existence of a subcritical flow requires that the flow must be critical somewhere downstream before any abrupt expansion of the channel (such as the drop-off at the channel's end). The critical state prevents an expansion wave from propagating upstream from the expansion and causing a transition to supercritical flow. (A more complete discussion of these phenomena may be found in most introductory fluid mechanics textbooks; see, for example, Ref. 1, pp. 363-377.)

Additional Information

Received 27 January 1984; revised 28 May 1984. Available online 10 August 2001. The authors would like to thank Bill Newman, Ralph Baca, Joel Paslaski and especially Ken Sieck and Scott Patton for their assistance and advice in the performance of these experiments. We are deeply appreciative of the financial support provided by the National Science Foundation (Grant CME 79-15132) and the Union Carbide Corporation.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 13, 2023