Difference between static and dynamic angle of repose of uniform sediment grains ... The concept of the angle of repose (AoR) of granular materials has been ..... lower AoR is approximately equal to the dynamic AoR, and the difference ... "Application of incomplete similarity theory for ... Simons, D. B., and Senturk, F. (1992).
1
Difference between static and dynamic angle of repose of uniform sediment grains
2 3 4 5
ABSTRACT
6
In the investigation of sediment transport, it is necessary to differentiate various definitions of
7
angle of repose (AoR) available in the literature. The static AoR, composed of upper and
8
lower angle of slope, forms just before and after slope instability, while the dynamic AoR can
9
be observed when sediment grains are moving continuously down an inclined plane. In the
10
present study, a series of laboratory experiments was conducted to measure static and
11
dynamic angle of repose for uniform natural sediments with median diameter of 0.28-4.38
12
mm. The results show that the different slope angles have different characteristics. The upper
13
and dynamic AoR increase slightly with increasing grain diameter, while the lower AoR is
14
not sensitive to changes in sediment size and may assume a constant value. The average of the
15
upper and lower AoR is equivalent to the dynamic AoR, and the difference between them
16
increases with increasing grain diameter. The present study suggests that the different angles
17
of repose should be treated with caution when applying in investigations of bedload transport,
18
dune migration and local scour development.
19
Keywords: angle of repose, avalanche, sediment transport
20 21
1
22
1. Introduction
23 24
The concept of the angle of repose (AoR) of granular materials has been applied in various
25
areas of science and engineering, such as sediment transport, geomorphology and chemical
26
engineering.
27
descriptions of initial sediment motion, dune formation, bedload transport process and scour-
28
hole geometry, and in the investigations of riverbank stability, riprap protection and reservoir
29
sediment removal, as demonstrated in ASCE Manual 110 (Garcia 2008), in which the term of
30
“angle of repose” appears in 35 instances.
In the hydraulics of sediment transport, the AoR has been applied in the
31
The AoR has been defined or measured differently, but with results open to
32
interpretation (Carrigy 1970; Francis 1986). For example, the AoR can be obtained simply by
33
pouring sand grains to form a conical pile. However, two different slopes can be differentiated
34
during the pile formation. As grains are gradually added to a heap, they can pile up to an
35
upper AoR (αU). Once masses slump, a new surface will form at a lower AoR (αL). As a
36
result, the AoR varies repeatedly during the growth of the pile. The upper AoR may be also
37
measured as a critical angle of a tilting box at which some grains start to roll down along the
38
inclined surface. In comparison, the lower AoR may be achieved at the end of an avalanche,
39
which can be generated by the removal of support from loose material. The AoR can also be
40
measured by draining grains through a bottom opening of a container, by building up a cone
41
over a fixed base, or by rotating a drum filled partially with grains (Eisen et al. 1998).
42
In principle, the AoR can be considered to be the maximum angle at which grains can
43
stand without becoming unstable. When conducting physical measurements, like in the pile
44
formation, two relatively constant angles of repose could be obtained. The upper angle is
45
associated with the onset of slope instability, and the lower angle is associated with the
46
cessation of slope instability. Unfortunately, confusions often exist in the differentiation
2
47
between the two angles and thus the use of the term of AoR in the literature.
48
For example, Simons and Senturk (1992) stated that the AoR is the angle of slope
49
formed by particulate material under the critical equilibrium condition of incipient sliding.
50
Soulsby (1997) applied the angle of final repose for the angle of lee slopes of dunes and the
51
angle of slope of the conical scour around a circular vertical pile, which is observed at the end
52
of avalanching. Garcia (2008) considered the AoR as a slope angle beyond which
53
spontaneous failure of the slope occurs. An early differentiation between the upper and lower
54
angles of slope was made by Bagnold (1966a), who called the upper angle the apparent
55
limiting static friction angle of initial yield and the lower angle the residual angle. Allen (1969)
56
described the upper angle as the angle of initial yield and the lower angle as the residual angle
57
after shearing. Carrigy (1970) noted that there is no agreement reached as to which angle
58
should be measured. Francis (1986) indicated that some confusion exists in the precise
59
meaning of the term ‘angle of repose’, and a single angle of repose is inadequate to explain all
60
observable characteristics of many scree slopes.
61
In recent decades, sediment transport and morphodynamic processes at various stages
62
have been widely simulated with numerical models, which often require a selection of a
63
proper value of AoR. However, relevant studies in the literature show that the problem has
64
only been approached with significant simplifications. For example, in the simulation of bank
65
failure, Zech et al. (2008) applied two critical angles (for submerged and emerged conditions)
66
above which a block failure occurs, and also two residual angles at which the failed materials
67
depose. A reasonable evaluation of all such angles for particular cases could only resort to
68
laboratory tests (Roulund et al. 2005; Zech et al. 2008; Evangelista et al. 2014; Evangelista et
69
al. 2015).
70
The present study aims to quantify differences among the different angles of repose. A
71
series of experiments was conducted with a rotating drum to measure the AoR of uniform
3
72
sediments under static and dynamic conditions. Both terms of static AoR and dynamic AoR
73
are used, with the static AoR consisting of lower (minimum) and upper (maximum) AoR and
74
the dynamic AoR describing the inclination of a surface layer of continuous sediment motion.
75 76 77
2. Experiments
78 79
In the present study, measurements of AoR were conducted using a transparent, motor-driven
80
rotating drum, of which the inner diameter was 28.90 cm and the depth was 11.50 cm (see Fig.
81
1). Altogether nine uniform natural sediments, with median diameter D ranging from 0.28
82
mm to 4.38 mm, were tested. In each test, the drum was half-filled with selected sediment
83
grains. All slope measurements were conducted under both dry (with sediment grains exposed
84
in air) and submerged condition (with the drum fully filled with water).
85
When the drum rotated, the following changes were generally observed in the slope of
86
the free surface of grains for each size of sediment. Initially at a very low rotating speed,
87
sediment grains moved together with the drum, demonstrating a rigid body motion until the
88
slope reached its upper angle, αU [see Fig. 2(a)]. Then, a further increase in the slope angle
89
triggered an avalanche, transporting grains down the slope. At the end of the avalanche, a new
90
slope formed at the lower angle, αL [see Fig. 2(b)]. Characterised by the repeated change in
91
the slope, the motion of sediment grains is referred to as slumping (Henein et al. 1983). If the
92
rotating speed was further increased, both αU and αL would disappear and the slope angle
93
approached a constant while sediment grains kept rolling down the slope. This indicated the
94
beginning of the rolling stage. The corresponding slope angle is referred to as the dynamic
95
AoR (αD). At this stage, sediment grains move continuously from the upper to lower end of
96
the slope, yielding a surface shear layer of grains that flow down the plane inclined at a fixed 4
97
angle. To achieve the rolling stage, a slow variation in the rotating speed was needed. From
98
the slumping to rolling stage, the free surface at any instance remained planar and thus can be
99
described with a single slope angle. However, after the rolling stage, an increase in the
100
rotating speed resulted in cascading or cataracting without forming any planar free surface
101
(Henein et al. 1983), which is beyond the subject of the present study.
102
To avoid undesired sliding along the inner wall during rotation, a layer of sediment
103
grains was glued to the cylindrical wall using silicon. To record the motion of sediment grains
104
in the drum, a camera was positioned horizontally facing the frontal side of the drum, with the
105
center of view being aligned with the drum axis. The back side of the drum was covered with
106
black paper to provide dark background. A video was taken at a rate of 25 frames per second.
107
The duration of each video was set so that at least 20 avalanches were captured in the
108
slumping regime, and at least one-minute recording was taken in the rolling regime.
109
With the colour difference between the sediment grains and the dark background, each
110
frame was first converted to a black and white picture and a straight line composed of more
111
than 400 pixels was then identified between the slope surface and the background. Finally, the
112
angle between the straight line and the horizontal was calculated. The above processing was
113
completed with the aid of Matlab (MathWorks Inc. 2007).
114 115 116
3. Results
117 118
Fig. 3 shows typical time series of the slope angle measured under the dry condition. The time
119
interval was 0.04 s as the video was taken at 25 frames per second. To calculate the slope
120
angle for each frame, the interface identified between the slope surface and the dark
121
background was fitted to a straight line. The correlation coefficients (R2) calculated for such
5
122
straight lines were all greater than 0.98. With the data plotted in Fig. 3, the calculated average
123
values of αU, αL and αD are 40.6o, 35.3o and 37.7o, respectively. Significant difference exists
124
in the measured angles from the slumping to rolling stage. At the slumping stage, the
125
variation of the slope angle is relatively large, ranging from 35.2o to 40.8o. In comparison, at
126
the rolling stage, the variation becomes much smaller, only from 37.0o to 38.1o, implying that
127
the slope angle can be approximated as a constant. Furthermore, it seems reasonable to take
128
the dynamic AoR as the average of the upper and lower AoR, i.e. αD ≈ 0.5(αU + αL). This
129
approximation has also been found acceptable by Liu et al. (2005) for other shapes of grains.
130
In the following, only the average values of αU, αL and αD, calculated at individual
131
rotating speeds, are used for analysis. Fig. 4 shows variations of αU, αL and αD with the
132
rotating speed under the dry condition. At the slumping stage, different variations can be
133
observed in the lower AoR (αL) and the upper AoR (αU). For example, for each sediment in
134
the range of D ≥ 0.73 mm, αL is not much affected by the rotating speed and can be assumed
135
to be a constant. However, the corresponding αU increases slightly with increasing rotating
136
speed. This implies that αU varies depending on the sediment supply at the upper end of the
137
slope. By gradually increasing the rotating speed up to a critical value, both αU and αL merged
138
into almost a single value (around the middle of αU and αL), indicating the inception of the
139
rolling stage. However, it should be mentioned that the critical rotating speed was not realized
140
for the two fine sediments of D = 0.28 mm and 0.46 mm. For these two cases, the difference
141
between αU and αL was small, and in particular the surface of the slope did not appear to be
142
planar and was subject to some local undulations, the latter disappearing for the cases of
143
coarser grains. Fig. 4 shows that the dynamic AoR (αD) measured at the rolling stage
144
increases with the sediment size, but it seems to be independent of the rotating speed.
145
With the data plotted in Fig. 4, the dependence of the three different kinds of AoR on
146
the sediment size for the dry condition is further examined in Fig. 5. To minimize effect of the 6
147
rotating speed, both the lower and upper AoR are taken as those measured at the lowest
148
rotating speed. It can be seen that for D ≥ 0.73 mm, the lower AoR does not change much
149
with the median diameter D (with an average of 35.4o), while both the upper and dynamic
150
AoR increases with increasing D. In addition, Fig. 5 also shows that the average angle of the
151
lower and upper AoR is close to the dynamic AoR.
152
Fig. 6 shows variations of the average αU, αL and αD with the rotating speed under the
153
submerged condition. The fashion of the variations is similar to that given in Fig. 4 under the
154
dry condition. However, the measurements obtained under the submerged condition are
155
subject to high uncertainties in comparison to those under the dry condition.
156
Fig. 7 provides the average values of αU, αL and αD varying with the sediment size for
157
the submerged condition. Both αU and αL were taken as those measured at the lowest rotating
158
speed. By making a point-by-point comparison between all the individual data points plotted
159
in Fig. 7 and the corresponding ones in Fig. 5, it can be found that the AoR measured under
160
the submerged condition generally decreases. Among the 23 cases compared, there is only
161
one case that shows the AoR under the submerged condition is larger than that under the dry
162
condition. The decreased angle varies from 0.0o to 2.5o for the upper AoR, from − 0.5o to 3.9o
163
for the lower AoR, and from 0.9o to 2.4o for the dynamic AoR.
164
The above changes are associated with a few factors. Under the dry condition,
165
sediment grains interact by direct contact, but they interact through a thin water layer when
166
submerged in water (Jain et al. 2004). In other words, given the irregular surface of the natural
167
sand and gravel, the inter-grain friction would be lower in water than in air. As a result, the
168
so-induced hydrodynamic lubrication between grains may become significant, which could
169
yield a decrease in the AoR. However, on the other hand, the inter-grain shear and thus the
170
AoR could be increased by the viscous effect of the water. In addition, the reduced weight of
171
each grain and thus its inertia may also alter the flow characteristics of the grains and thus the 7
172
AoR value. The observed decrease in the AoR under the submerged condition implies that the
173
hydrodynamic lubrication may be dominant in comparison to other factors.
174 175
The variation of the dynamic AoR with the median diameter of sediment grains for the submerged condition can be described using the following empirical function: tan(αD) = 0.74D0.05
(1)
176
where D is the median diameter in mm. For comparison, also superimposed in Fig. 7 is
177
another empirical formula:
αD = 36.45 + 4.294 log(D)
(2)
178
with D given in mm, which was proposed by Xiong (1989) based on slope angles measured
179
from underwater conical piles for sediment grains of 0.06-6 mm. The two empirical formulas
180
agree well to each other, in particular for the range of D = 0.5-3 mm. This agreement suggests
181
that the average AoR derived from conical piles can be considered equivalent to the dynamic
182
AoR and also to the average of the upper and lower AoR.
183
In comparison to the upper and dynamic AoR, both varying with the grain diameter,
184
the lower AoR seems not to be sensitive to the change in the grain diameter for the submerged
185
condition. It varies from 33.2o to 35.6o around an average of 34.4o. Such variations were also
186
reported by Froehlich (2011), who conducted large-scale measurements of the lower AoR at
187
74 stockpiles of dumped natural and crushed rock (D = 3.2-355 mm) for the dry condition.
188
Froehlich (2011) classified the shape of rock as being round, subround, subangular or angular.
189
It is interesting to note that his data of subround and subangular rock (in the similar shape of
190
natural sand and gravels as used in the present study) show that the lower AoR does not
191
depend on the grain size. It varied in the range of 34.4±1.2o, in spite of the wide change in the
192
rock size.
193
To quantify to what extend the AoR fluctuates between the upper to lower limit, the
194
relative differences, (αU − αL)/αave where αave = 0.5(αU +αL), were calculated for both dry 8
195
and submerged conditions and the results are plotted against the grain diameter in Fig. 8. It
196
shows that the difference (αU − αL) significantly increases with D, up to 25% of αave for D =
197
3.68 mm. The data trend can be approximated as
αU − αL = 0.12 D αave 198
(3)
where D is given in mm.
199 200 201
4. Discussions
202 203
In spite of the fact that the granular motion in a rotating drum is different from the sediment
204
transport observed in an open channel flow, the rotating drum clearly demonstrates that the
205
AoR varies repeatedly from the upper AoR to the lower AoR. Such information is useful by
206
noting that the typical variations in the slope angle also take place in the lee side of a
207
migrating dune (Allen 1985) or in the development of a scour hole (Roulund et al. 2005). The
208
dune migration results from individual grains rolling down the slip face in the lee side of the
209
dune. When the slope over-steepens, large numbers of grains move down the slope in an
210
avalanche fashion. Therefore, the slope angle of the lee side cannot be simply taken as a
211
constant, as it generally varies from the upper AoR at the beginning of the avalanche to the
212
lower AoR at the end of the avalanche. In addition, the experimental results obtained in the
213
present study can be used for the selection of the upper and lower AoR for a particular
214
sediment in the implementation of a sand-slide model in the simulation of scour around a pier
215
(Roulund et al. 2005).
216
The rolling stage appearing in the rotating drum may resemble the sheet flow of the
217
bedload at high transport rates, which occurs over a planar sediment bed. Therefore, the
218
dynamic AoR measured at the rolling stage could be applied to estimate the friction
9
219
coefficient for the sheet flow. By noting that the dynamic AoR is close to the average of the
220
upper and lower AoR, the angle of friction for sheet flows would be generally higher than the
221
lower AoR measured at the end of an avalanche but smaller than the upper AoR. The above
222
conjecture should be limited to intensive bedload transport with high sediment concentration.
223
The dynamic AoR and thus the corresponding angle of friction would reduce for low
224
sediment concentration (Allen 1985; Nino and Garcia 1998).
225
In addition, to explore how the dynamic AoR varies with sediment transport rate, the
226
following calculation can be performed for the case of the rotating drum. First, if ignoring the
227
effect of sediment concentration, the sediment transport rate per unit width in the drum can be
228
estimated as ωR2/2 (Cheng 2012), where R is the drum radius and ω is the rotating speed in
229
rad/s. It is equal to the total rate of sediment supply in the drum, and also the maximum
230
transport rate of the flowing layer of sediment grains at the center of the drum (Cheng et al.
231
2011). Finally the dimensionless transport rate or Einstein number φ can be expressed as
φ=
ωR2
(4)
2 ΔgD 3
232
where Δ = (ρs − ρ)/ρ with ρs and ρ denoting the sediment and water densities, respectively,
233
and g is the gravitational acceleration. Fig. 9 shows that the dynamic AoR decreases with
234
increasing φ for the submerged condition. This result may explain in part why the dynamic
235
friction coefficient cannot be taken as a constant in the investigation of bedload transport
236
(Bagnold 1973; Seminara et al. 2002). The variation shown in Fig. 9 agrees qualitatively with
237
the result obtained by Bagnold (1966b), who stated that the dynamic bedload friction
238
coefficient decreases with increasing the Shields number (and thus the bedload transport rate).
239
All the experiments in the present study were conducted only with the fixed-size drum.
240
By noting that a variation in the diameter of the drum will change the grain supply at the
241
upper end of the slope, the drum size will affect flow characteristics, such as, the thickness of
10
242
the flowing layer (Felix et al. 2007) and the slope angles (Liu et al. 2005). Such scale effects
243
remain a challenging task at present and need future research efforts.
244 245 246
5. Summary
247 248
With a rotating drum half-filled with uniform sediment grains, three different angles of repose
249
are clearly identified. They are the upper AoR formed at the inception of an avalanche, the
250
lower AoR at the end of an avalanche, and the dynamic AoR characterised with continuous
251
sediment transport down the slope. The measurements show that the average of the upper and
252
lower AoR is approximately equal to the dynamic AoR, and the difference between the upper
253
and lower AoR increases with increasing sediment size, up to 25% of the dynamic AoR for D
254
= 3.68 mm. Both the upper and dynamic AoR increase slightly with increasing grain diameter,
255
while the lower AoR is not sensitive to changes in sediment size and may assume a constant.
256
The dependence of the dynamic AoR on the grain diameter, which was derived from the
257
present data, agrees well with the previous AoR measured from underwater conical piles.
258
The results obtained in the present study could be useful for modelling sediment
259
transport in open channel flows by noting that similar variations in the AoR also occur during
260
dune migration and scour-hole development.
261 262 263
Notations
264 265
AoR
Angle of repose
266
D
Median diameter of sediment grains
267
g
Gravitational acceleration 11
268
R2
Correlation coefficient
269
αave
0.5(αU +αL)
270
αD
Dynamic AoR
271
αL
Lower AoR
272
αU
Upper AoR
273
Δ
(ρs − ρ)/ρ
274
ρ
Water density
275
ρs
Sediment density
276
φ
Dimensionless transport rate or Einstein number
277 278 279 280 281
12
282
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366
Camera Motor
11.50 cm Drum diameter = 28.90 cm
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
Fig. 1. Schematic of experimental setup
375
15
ω
(a) αU
ω
(b)
αL
376
377
378
Fig. 2. A Angle of sloope varies between uppper and lower AoR in the slumpingg regime
379
380
16
43
αU αL
42
Slumping regime Rolling regime
Angle (deg)
41 40 39 38 37 36 35 0
10
20
30
Time (s)
40
381 382
383
384
385
386
Fig. 3. Measurements of upper and lower AoR (slumping regime, ω = 0.035 rad/s), and
387
dynamic AoR (rolling regime, ω = 0.131 rad/s) for D = 1.29 mm under dry condition
388
17
389
48
D = 0.28 mm D 0.46 0.73 1.02 1.29 2.40 3.08 3.68 4.38
46
upper
AoR (deg)
44 42 40 38
lower
dynamic
36 34 0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
Rotating speed (deg/s)
390 391
392
393
394
395
396
397
Fig. 4. Variations of upper, lower and dynamic AoR with rotating speed for dry condition for different diameters of sediment grains. For D ≥ 0.73 mm, the upper AoR increases slightly with increasing rotating speed while the lower AoR can be approximated as a constant. Both upper and lower AoR merge suddenly into the dynamic AoR at the end of slumping regime.
398 399 400
18
401
50 Lower
48
Upper
46
Average Dynamic
AoR (deg)
44 42 40 38 36 34 32 0
1
2
3
4
5
D D (mm)
402 403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
Fig. 5. Variations of upper, lower and dynamic AoR with grain diameter for dry condition
19
411
412
48
D = 0.28 mm D 0.43 0.73 1.02 1.29 2.40 3.08 3.68 4.38
46
42
upper
AoR (deg)
44
40 38
dynamic lower
36 34 32 0
2
4
6
8
10
12
Rotating speed (deg/s)
413 414
415
416
417
418
419
420 421 422 423 424
Fig. 6. Variations of upper, lower and dynamic AoR with rotating speed for submerged condition for different diameters of sediment grains. For most of the data series, the upper AoR increases slightly with increasing rotating speed, while the lower AoR can be approximated as a constant. Both upper and lower AoR merge suddenly into the dynamic AoR at the end of slumping regime.
20
14
425
50 Lower Upper Average Dynamic Eq. (1) Xiong (1989)
48 46
AoR (deg)
44 42 40 38 36 34 32 0
1
2
3
4
D D (mm)
426 427
428
429
430
431
432
433 434
Fig. 7. Variations of upper, lower and dynamic AoR with grain diameter for submerged condition.
435
21
5
436
437
Relative difference of AoR
0.3 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 Dry Submerged Eq. (3)
0.05 0 0
1
2
3
4
DD (mm)
438 439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
Fig. 8. Variation of relative difference, (αU - αL)/αave , with grain diameter.
448
22
5
449
450
39.5
dynamic AoR (deg)
39.0
38.5
38.0
37.5
37.0
36.5 0
451
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
φ
3
452
453
454
455
456
457
Fig. 9. Dynamic AoR decreases with increasing dimensionless sediment transport rate
458 459
23
3.5