J. McElwaine K. Nishimura
jim@orange.lowtem.hokudai.ac.jp
Institute of Low
Temperature Science,
University of Hokkaido,
North 19 West
8, Kita-Ku,
Sapporo 0060-0819, Japan
Snow avalanches have been measured and observed in the Shiai valley, Kurobe since 1989. Though there are partial data on the internal velocity distribution for both dense and powder parts [Gubler, 1987,Kawada et al., 1989,Nishimura et al., 1989,Nishimura et al., 1993a,Dent et al., 1994,Nishimura & Ito, 1997] the data are insufficient to constrain and discriminate between current avalanche models, for a recent survey of current models see [Harbitz, 1999, Harbitz (1999)], and thus insufficient to allow a quantitative understanding of the dynamics and internal structure of snow avalanches. The poor quality of the data is because of the unpredictability, scarcity and intense destructive power of avalanches.
Avalanches can be modelled in the laboratory using granular materials on
inclined planes, usually in water for powder avalanches [Tochon-Danguy
& Hopfinger, 1975,Hopfinger
& Tochon-Danguy, 1977,Beghin
& Brugnot, 1983,Hermann
et al., 1987,Beghin
& Olagne, 1991,Keller,
1995] or air for dense avalanches [Hutter,
1991,Hutter
et al., 1995,Nishimura
et al., 1993b,Greve
& Hutter, 1993,Greve
et al., 1994]. Laboratory experiments are much easier to perform
than field experiments and are usually, easily repeatable. However, the small
size of the granular particles used makes direct observation of individual
particles difficult, and only a few similarity parameters are typically
satisfied [Keller,
1995]. For example, no laboratory experiments have yet been carried out in
which a dense granular flow becomes a turbulent suspension by entraining the
ambient fluid, though in some experiments [Rzadkiewicz
et al., 1997] a small number of the grains may enter suspension.
Instead experimental models of powder snow models in water tanks use a denser
fluid or a premixed turbulent suspension. Laboratory granular flows also rarely
exhibit the complex three-dimensional structure which is characteristic of
avalanches and other large geophysical flows. For these reasons for the last
five years large scale granular flow experiments have been carried out using
golf balls and ping-pong balls. The first experiments were carried out on long
(20- ) chutes and more recently on the Miyanomori ski jump. Ping-pong balls
are particularly suitable, since they reach terminal velocity in only a few
metres, so fully developed flows occur even on short slopes. These experiments
have been described in several papers [Nishimura
et al., 1996,Nishimura
et al., 1998,Keller
et al., 1998].
The aim of these experiments is to elucidate the dynamics of two-phase granular flows rather than to directly extrapolate the results to snow avalanches. The experiments provide detailed data and provide insights on the physically significant dynamical processes controlling avalanches. The hope is that this will lead to a theory of snow avalanches based on physical processes with no free parameters.
The kinetic theory of granular matter provides only poor agreement with experiments [Jenkins & Savage, 1983,Haff, 1983,Lun et al., 1984,Jenkins & Richman, 1988,Johnson et al., 1990,Anderson & Jackson, 1992,Jenkins, 1994], but does provide a theoretical framework for discussing stresses in granular flows. Another approach is the direct simulation of granular flows using the discrete element method [Campbell & Brennen, 1985,Campbell & Gong, 1986,Cleary & Campbell, 1993,Campbell et al., 1995,Hanes et al., 1997]. These simulations have increased the understanding of granular flows, including two-phase flows, but these simulations have not yet accurately dealt with particles strongly coupled to fluids or three-dimensional anisotropic flows.
The ping-pong ball avalanches can be described by well known equations. The
air flow obeys the Navier-Stokes equations and individual ping-pong balls follow
Newton's laws, whereby the force on a particle is a function of gravity,
particle-particle contacts, particle-ground contacts and air drag. The no-slip
boundary condition between particles and the air flow determine the drag force.
For small numbers of particles at low Reynolds numbers in closed domains these
equations can be directly solved [Glowinski
et al., 1996,Hu,
1996,Blackmore
et al., 1999], but for this experiment it is currently
impossible, because of the large number of particles and the large range of
length and time scales. Particle-particle collisions occur over time intervals
of order of whereas the duration of the flow in these experiments is around
. The length scales in these experiments are given by the length of the
ski jump (
), the volume of the flow (
), the diameter of the balls (
) and the compression of the balls during collisions (
).
This papers discusses two complementary approaches for describing the experiments. The first is to consider the flow as a single object moving down the ski jump and to use similarity arguments to deduce gross features of the flow. The second approach is to use two-phase flow equations that couple the Navier-Stokes equation for the air flow to the kinetic theory equations for the ball flow using an (empirical) drag force.
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When the door of the box was opened, the balls at the front of the box
rapidly accelerated down the slope (Figs. 3
and 4).
The front velocity was much larger than the tail velocity (the last balls took
several seconds to leave the box). For a flow the front of the flow accelerated approximately linearly with
distance until it reached a speed of
after
, whereas the balls in the tail had a speed of only a few metres per
second -- similar to the speed of a single ball. The front velocity was roughly
constant for the next
until the slope angle started to decrease. This large disparity in
speed between head and tail caused the flow to elongate so much that at times it
covered more than half the slope. The flows can be separated into three distinct
regions: a short, high, fast moving head; a longer, lower body moving at the
same speed; and a very long tail moving much slower, consisting of separated
balls.
Other macroscopic features of the flow are interesting but hard to quantify.
At the beginning of the flow there are often several waves within the flow which
move faster than the body and coalesce in the head [Nishimura
et al., 1998]. Another obvious feature are two roughly circular
regions of reduced flow height, symmetrically located about the flow centreline,
a little behind the head, called ``eyes'' after [Nohguchi
et al., 1997, Nohguchi et al. (1997)]. They can be seen
on the third line up from the bottom of Fig. 3
as the darker regions. Similar patterns have been reported in laboratory
granular flow experiments with styrene foam particles [Nohguchi,
1996] and with ice particles (Nohguchi, personal communication). In these
experiments the particles are around in diameter and the flows contain 1,000-
. For such a feature to exist in experiments of such
different scales suggests that the mean velocity fields and flow structure are
similar in all these experiments. The ``eyes'' may represent a pair of vortices
shed by the head, but only a detailed quantitative analysis of ball velocities
can confirm this. In the tail the balls are not distributed evenly but tend to
cluster, because of inelastic collapse. (As density in a granular flow increases
the collision rate increases thus increasing dissipation and reducing granular
pressure. The density thus continues to increase and the collision rate
diverges, so that a group of particles can come to rest in continuous contact in
finite time.)
The critical assumption is that there is only one significant length scale
given by
The effective gravitational acceleration on the flow is , where
is the angle of the slope,
the friction with the slope,
the acceleration due to gravity and
and
are the air and ball densities respectively. After the initial surge
from the box the flow is close to its equilibrium velocity, i.e. it is
accelerating/decelerating slowly, so inertia can be ignored. The Reynolds number
for the air flow is of the order
so air viscosity can be ignored. Under the length scale assumption
(Eq. 3)
the non-dimensional density ratio
, where
is the mass of a single ball, is constant for different sized flows
since
. Therefore air density
need not be further considered as a dimensional variable since it can
be substituted by
. The dependence on the box size and ball diameter has already been
discussed which leaves only three variables
,
and
. Thus the only dimensionless combination that can be formed containing
the front velocity is the densiometric Froude number
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(4) |
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(5) |
In [Nishimura
et al., 1998, Nishimura et al. (1998)] the front velocity
was measured between the k point and the p point (where the slope
angle, , is roughly constant and steepest, see Fig. 1).
The remarkably good fit between this equation and experiment is seen in
Fig. 5
and provides additional justification for Eq. 3.
As expected the error is worse for small flows, since they rapidly spread into
single thickness layers with two significant length scales
(width and length) and
(height). The height is likely to be the significant length scale in
this range so for small flows we expect the velocities to be independent of flow
size.
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If the structure of any feature in the flow of size is changing slowly with respect to
, where
is the mean flow velocity, then we can regard this data as providing a
cross section through the flow in the direction of mean velocity, in this case
down the slope. For Fig. 6
the mean flow velocity is
thus
corresponds to
. The head of
long,
high followed by a body
high is visible. The full flow (not shown in Fig. 6)
has a body of approximately constant height
and length
followed by the tail of the flow which stretches back to the box and
consists of separated balls.
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The central part of the ski jump is composed of downslope pointing bristles and experiments with individual balls show that it is totally inelastic -- the balls bounce to no observable degree -- so that horizontal momentum cannot be converted to vertical momentum by collisions with the slope, but only in collisions with other balls. Since vertical motion will rapidly decay through ground collisions, a priori, one might have expected a high density flow where the balls are in continuous contact with very small fluctuation velocities. This is indeed what happens initially when the balls slump out of the box. However, this dense flow state is unstable and as the flow accelerates the velocity fluctuations increase and the density decreases.
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The kinetic theory of granular matter follows that of gases and describes a
system by a particle distribution function , where
is the number of particles with velocity
and range
that are centred at
and range
at time
. The number density
is the integral of
over all velocities and the volume fraction
. The mean value of any particle property
is defined as
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(7) |
The square root of the diagonal elements of are the velocity standard deviations along the coordinate
axis and are shown in Fig. 8.
The standard deviation is taken over each video field. This shows that the
perpendicular (
), and cross-slope (
) velocity deviations are roughly similar in the head and
the body,
and
respectively. However, the down-slope (
) is low initially, then increases rapidly in the
head to reach a maximum of
before decaying to a roughly constant
in the body. The results are similar for other flows.
Kinetic theories [Lun
et al., 1984,Anderson
& Jackson, 1992] of granular matter often postulate that is isotropic, i.e. the diagonal stresses
,
and
are identical and the off-diagonal stresses are zero.
This is clearly not the case for these flows. Figure 8
shows that the diagonal elements of
are never equal. These data are consistent with video
footage in which horizontal velocity structure is visible and with Fig. 7
that shows that there is no appreciable vertical shearing.
In the case of steady and uniform flow the mean velocity must be constant and
the momentum equation for the flow is
There is also a dynamical requirement given by Eq. 8
that the forces on the front should balance.
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(9) |
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Although in the general case of flow past bodies of arbitrary form the actual
flow pattern bears almost no relation to the pattern of potential flow, for
streamlined shapes the flow may differ very little from potential flow;
more precisely, it will be potential flow except in a thin layer of fluid at the
surface of the body and in a relatively narrow wake behind the
body [Landau
& Lifschitz, 1987]. In particular in front of the avalanche head the
flow will be irrotational since the Reynolds number is very high (for length of , velocity
,
). A simple approximation is to assume that the flow field
is that of irrotational flow around a sphere (Fig. 9)
where the sphere represents the head of the gravity current (cf. Fig. 6)
in a stationary frame. The flow field has the required symmetries since it is
symmetric about the cross-stream (
) plane and, if the influence of the ground on the
air-flow is assumed to be small, the flow field can be reflected in the
perpendicular (
) plane.
A similar approach to the ambient flow around gravity currents was pioneered
by [von
Kármán, 1940, von Kármán (1940)]. He considered the local flow around where
the head meets the ground and used this to deduce the head angle ( ). This is accurate over distances small compared to the
head height. Similar ideas were also discussed in [Hampton,
1972, Hampton (1972)], but he considered the ambient flow around
semi-infinite debris flows, thus his approach is correct over scales large
compared to the head height but small compared to the flow length. In contrast
the approach in this paper is equivalent to retaining the first three terms (up
to the dipole) in a multi-pole expansion and is therefore asymptotically
correct.
To apply Bernoulli's theorem it is most convenient to work in a frame in
which the flow field can be approximated as steady. This is true in a frame
moving with the same velocity as the avalanche head since the slope angle
changes slowly. The velocity distribution around a stationary sphere of radius
in a flow field moving with constant velocity
at infinity is
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(12) |
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(13) |
The velocities implied by the pressure data are shown in table 1.
The lower three sensors are all in rough agreement with the velocity increasing
slightly with height. The difference between these velocities and the video
derived head velocity (of order
) is the penetration velocity of the air into the head.
Unsurprisingly this decreases with height as the air flows over the avalanche
rather than into it. The flow velocities from the top sensor (height 0.45m) are
low because it is largely out of the flow in a region of reduced air velocity.
The third column of table 1
compares the air velocities with scaling Eq. 2.
The agreement for the lowest three sensors in the flow is very good and provides
further evidence in favour of the length scaling hypothesis.
Though the calculated velocities match the scaling law reasonably well the
radii do not (Table 2).
A possible explanation is as follows. The flow field far from the body is that
of a dipole imposed on constant flow. The magnitude of the dipole is the surface
area of the implied sphere times the velocity . Close to the front however the flow field, to second
order, will be more like that around an ellipsoid (this is the result of
expanding the surface to second order in the coordinates). The equation fit is
influenced by the region of high pressure difference close to the flow front and
the length scale measured here is actually the local radius of curvature. Thus
. Video footage and pictures of the slope shows that the
flow front is reasonably approximated by the parabola
where
and
is the distance from the centre line. Thus in Fig. 3
it can be seen that
back from the front the flow is
wide. The measure radius of curvature in the
-
plane is thus
independent of the flow scale. This does not
necessarily contradict the scaling hypothesis, because this is a local length
scale and the width of the flow is still expected to scale as
. Thus if
scales and
is constant the ratio between front radii is
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(14) |
The definition of the calculated radius is somewhat arbitrary. The pressure
data could be equivalently fitted to
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(15) |
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(18) |
The rapid decrease in pressure as the flow front goes past the sensor that is
predicted by this equation is clearly seen in Fig. 11
(and also Fig. 10).
The total pressure drops by from
to
. The front velocity is around
so this corresponds to a distance of
certainly much larger than
thus Eq. 20
is
. From table 1
the air velocity for this flow at
is
thus
so that
. This value for the volume fraction seems reasonable and
is much lower than the maximum packing fraction thus justifying the dilute
approximation.
The momentum equation for the ping-pong balls (Eq. 8)
can now be integrated with the same approximations to give
A more detailed analysis of Eq. 21
is not appropriate for several reasons. The large fluctuations of the air
pressure in the avalanche imply that the flow is turbulent and make
interpretation of the air pressure data very difficult since the sensor measures
a complicated function of the local velocity and local pressure which can only
be simply understood if the direction of the velocity is known. The ball
velocity data also contains a lot of noise since in a typical frame only a dozen
balls can be identified. Though mean values of velocity are reasonably accurate
derivatives of are much less so. There is an additional problem that the
balls that can be identified may be very special (perhaps only those with low
vertical velocity have been sampled for example) possibly leading to systematic
errors which have not been estimated. In addition the ball position measurements
were taken one metre to the left of the flow centre and the location of the
pressure measurements. Despite all these difficulties the data does suggest a
number of significant processes within the avalanches.
Classical work on gravity currents is based on perfect-fluid theory and assumes that the effects of viscosity and mixing of the fluids at the interface can be ignored [Benjamin, 1968]. A major result of Benjamin (1968) is that, except when a gravity current exactly fills half a cavity, energy dissipation must occur through the formation of a head and turbulent flow behind it. Extensions to the basic theory include lower boundary effects [Simpson, 1972] and a mixing region behind the head [Simpson, 1986], but there is still assumed to be a clear boundary at the front of the current.
A complete description of the flow field for a mixture of Newtonian fluids requires only one velocity field. This is because there can be no relative motion (at a point) between two fluids since a no-slip condition holds everywhere, thus the velocity fields for each fluid (where they are defined) must be identical. Thus mixing between fluids is a slow diffusion process and there are often well defined boundaries. The stability of boundaries is also enhanced by surface tension. However, when one of the fluids is a non-cohesive granular fluid there is no surface tension and the granular fluid will generally have a distinct velocity field. This is because although on the surface of each grain a no slip condition holds, very large velocity gradients can exist across a narrow boundary layer, thus the difference between the ambient fluid velocity field and the granular velocity field averaged over volumes containing a few grains can be very large. For grains falling in a gravitational field for example the relative velocity will be of the order of the terminal velocity.
The standard gravity current theory [Benjamin,
1968] (correctly) assumes a stagnation point at the front of a gravity
current because the velocity of the ambient and the current must be equal. This
need not be true for granular gravity currents and the air pressure data shows
that there is a significant relative velocity over the width of the head
(Fig. 12.)
The drag force is related to the relative velocity so a large difference between
these avalanches and standard gravity currents is that the drag is a body force
over the head of the avalanche rather than a surface force over the head's front
surface. Analysis of the forces in the head of the avalanches shows that there
is an approximate balance of forces on the balls between gravity, granular
stress and air drag, and that surface friction is negligible. The air drag is
balanced by a large, anisotropic increase in the granular stress and gravity.
This increase is a result of an increase in the downslope fluctuation velocity
which then leads to an increase in vertical and cross-slope fluctuations through
collisions. Though a quantatitive balance of the vertical forces in the head has
not been accomplished the granular stress and the vertical component of the drag
are probably both significant and lead to the height of the flow. Air drag may
also directly enhance vertical velocity fluctuations. Further back in the body
of the avalanche the granular stresses are constant (downslope) and the height
is lower. Since surface drag is negligible the gravity must be balanced by air
drag forces through the top surface. A likely mechanism for this is momentum
transfer by the saltating particles. During their high trajectories they have
time to exchange considerable horizontal momentum with slowly moving air and
when they collide with the main body this momentum will be almost perfectly
transfered. In effect there is a drag interaction between the main body and the
air flow over the whole height of the saltating balls. Though this has not been
quantified, this mechanism of momentum transfer is most likely more efficient
than the drag on the upper surface of a smooth gravity current and helps
explains why steady flows occur on such steeps slopes even with such a large
relative density ( .)
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Air drag length scale |
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Ball velocity |
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Ball fluctuation velocity |
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Ball diameter |
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Position and velocity distribution function |
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Drag force between balls and air |
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Froude number |
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Gravity |
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Gravity adjusted for buoyancy, friction and slope angle |
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Scaling exponent |
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Second moment of ball fluctuation velocity |
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Length of a feature in the flow |
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Length scale of a flow |
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Length scale ratio |
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mass of an individual ball |
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Ball-slope friction |
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Surface normal |
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Ball number density |
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Number of balls in an experiment |
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Air pressure |
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Air pressure at the flow front |
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Ball volume density |
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Constant ball volume density in the flow |
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General function of balls |
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Distance from centre of flow sphere |
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Radius of sphere |
![]() ![]() |
Radii of curvature |
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Air density |
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Ball density |
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Stress tensor |
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Distance along a streamline |
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Time |
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Time constant |
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Granular temperature |
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Slope angle |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
Rotations of the principal axes of ![]() |
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Mean ball velocity |
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Speed of the flow front |
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Mean speed of the flow |
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Air velocity and speed |
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Relative velocity and speed between air and flow front |
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Width of the ball volume density variation |
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Local Cartesian coordinates aligned with the slope |
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