Author:
ACTON JAMES M.,HUPPERT HERBERT E.,WORSTER M. GRAE
Abstract
The spreading of a two-dimensional, viscous gravity current propagating over and
draining into a deep porous substrate is considered both theoretically and experimentally.
We first determine analytically the rate of drainage of a one-dimensional layer
of fluid into a porous bed and find that the theoretical predictions for the downward
rate of migration of the fluid front are in excellent agreement with our laboratory
experiments. The experiments suggest a rapid and simple technique for the determination
of the permeability of a porous medium. We then combine the relationships
for the drainage of liquid from the current through the underlying medium with a
formalism for its forward motion driven by the pressure gradient arising from the
slope of its free surface. For the situation in which the volume of fluid V fed to the
current increases at a rate proportional to t3, where t is the time since its initiation,
the shape of the current takes a self-similar form for all time and its length is proportional
to t2. When the volume increases less rapidly, in particular for a constant
volume, the front of the gravity current comes to rest in finite time as the effects of
fluid drainage into the underlying porous medium become dominant. In this case, the
runout length is independent of the coefficient of viscosity of the current, which sets
the time scale of the motion. We present numerical solutions of the governing partial
differential equations for the constant-volume case and find good agreement with our
experimental data obtained from the flow of glycerine over a deep layer of spherical
beads in air.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
94 articles.
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