A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides

Granular slides are omnipresent in both natural and industrial contexts. Scale effects are changes in physical behaviour of a phenomenon at different geometric scales, such as between a laboratory experiment and a corresponding larger event observed in nature. These scale effects can be significant...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kesseler, Matthew, Heller, Valentin, Turnbull, Barbara
Format: Article
Published: Springer 2018
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52202/
_version_ 1848798671849652224
author Kesseler, Matthew
Heller, Valentin
Turnbull, Barbara
author_facet Kesseler, Matthew
Heller, Valentin
Turnbull, Barbara
author_sort Kesseler, Matthew
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Granular slides are omnipresent in both natural and industrial contexts. Scale effects are changes in physical behaviour of a phenomenon at different geometric scales, such as between a laboratory experiment and a corresponding larger event observed in nature. These scale effects can be significant and can render models of small size inaccurate by underpredicting key characteristics such as ow velocity or runout distance. Although scale effects are highly relevant to granular slides due to the multiplicity of length and time scales in the flow, they are currently not well understood. A laboratory setup under Froude similarity has been developed, allowing dry granular slides to be investigated at a variety of scales, with a channel width configurable between 0.25-1.00 m. Maximum estimated grain Reynolds numbers, which quantify whether the drag force between a particle and the surrounding air act in a turbulent or viscous manner, are found in the range 102-103. A discrete element method (DEM) simulation has also been developed, validated against an axisymmetric column collapse and a granular slide experiment of Hutter and Koch (1995), before being used to model the present laboratory experiments and to examine a granular slide of significantly larger scale. This article discusses the details of this laboratory-numerical approach, with the main aim of examining scale effects related to the grain Reynolds number. Increasing dust formation with increasing scale may also exert influence on laboratory experiments. Overall, significant scale effects have been identified for characteristics such as ow velocity and runout distance in the physical experiments. While the numerical modelling shows good general agreement at the medium scale, it does not capture differences in behaviour seen at the smaller scale, highlighting the importance of physical models in capturing these scale effects.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:23:29Z
format Article
id nottingham-52202
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:23:29Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Springer
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-522022020-05-04T19:43:03Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52202/ A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides Kesseler, Matthew Heller, Valentin Turnbull, Barbara Granular slides are omnipresent in both natural and industrial contexts. Scale effects are changes in physical behaviour of a phenomenon at different geometric scales, such as between a laboratory experiment and a corresponding larger event observed in nature. These scale effects can be significant and can render models of small size inaccurate by underpredicting key characteristics such as ow velocity or runout distance. Although scale effects are highly relevant to granular slides due to the multiplicity of length and time scales in the flow, they are currently not well understood. A laboratory setup under Froude similarity has been developed, allowing dry granular slides to be investigated at a variety of scales, with a channel width configurable between 0.25-1.00 m. Maximum estimated grain Reynolds numbers, which quantify whether the drag force between a particle and the surrounding air act in a turbulent or viscous manner, are found in the range 102-103. A discrete element method (DEM) simulation has also been developed, validated against an axisymmetric column collapse and a granular slide experiment of Hutter and Koch (1995), before being used to model the present laboratory experiments and to examine a granular slide of significantly larger scale. This article discusses the details of this laboratory-numerical approach, with the main aim of examining scale effects related to the grain Reynolds number. Increasing dust formation with increasing scale may also exert influence on laboratory experiments. Overall, significant scale effects have been identified for characteristics such as ow velocity and runout distance in the physical experiments. While the numerical modelling shows good general agreement at the medium scale, it does not capture differences in behaviour seen at the smaller scale, highlighting the importance of physical models in capturing these scale effects. Springer 2018-06-28 Article PeerReviewed Kesseler, Matthew, Heller, Valentin and Turnbull, Barbara (2018) A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides. Landslides . ISSN 1612-510X https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10346-018-1023-z doi:10.1007/s10346-018-1023-z doi:10.1007/s10346-018-1023-z
spellingShingle Kesseler, Matthew
Heller, Valentin
Turnbull, Barbara
A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides
title A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides
title_full A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides
title_fullStr A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides
title_full_unstemmed A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides
title_short A laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides
title_sort laboratory-numerical approach for modelling scale effects in dry granular slides
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52202/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52202/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52202/