EP24A-07
A Newton-Euler Description for Sediment Movement.

Tuesday, 15 December 2015: 17:30
2003 (Moscone West)
Georgios Maniatis1, Trevor Hoey2, Tim Drysdale3, Rebecca A Hodge4 and Manousos Valyrakis1, (1)University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12, United Kingdom, (2)University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom, (3)Open University, Department of Engineering and Innovation, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom, (4)University of Durham, Department of Geography, Durham, United Kingdom
Abstract:
We present progress from the development of a purpose specific sensing system for sediment transport (Maniatis et al. 2013). This system utilises the capabilities of contemporary inertial micro-sensors (strap-down accelerometers and gyroscopes) to record fluvial transport from the moving body-frame of artificial pebbles modelled precisely to represent the motion of real, coarse sediment grains (D90=100 mm class). This type of measurements can be useful in the context of sediment transport only if the existing mathematical understanding of the process is updated. We test a new mathematical model which defines specifically how the data recorded in the body frame of the sensor (Lagrangian frame of reference) can be generalised to the reference frame of the flow (channel, Eulerian frame of reference). Given the association of the two most widely used models for sediment transport with those frames of reference (Shields’ to Eulerian frame and HA. Einstein’s to Lagrangian frame), this description builds the basis for the definition of explicit incipient motion criteria (Maniatis et al. 2015) and for the upscaling from point-grain scale measurements to averaged, cross-sectional, stream related metrics. Flume experiments where conducted in the Hydraulics laboratory of the University of Glasgow where a spherical sensor of 800 mm diameter and capable of recoding inertial dynamics at 80Hz frequency was tested under fluvial transport conditions. We managed to measure the dynamical response of the unit during pre-entrainment/entrainment transitions, on scaled and non-scaled to the sensor’s diameter bed and for a range of hydrodynamic conditions (slope up to 0.02 and flow increase rate up to 0.05m3.s-1. Preliminary results from field deployment on a mixed bedrock-alluvial channel are also presented.

Maniatis et. al 2013 J. Sens. Actuator Netw. 2013, 2(4), 761-779;

Maniatis et. al 2015: “CALCULATION OF EXPLICIT PROBABILITY OF ENTRAINMENT BASED ON INERTIAL ACCELERATION MEASUREMENTS” J. Hydraulic Engineering, Under review.