4.7 Article

Linear stability of shallow morphodynamic flows

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 916, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2021.235

Keywords

shallow water flows; particle; fluid flow

Funding

  1. Newton Fund grant 'Quantitative Lahar Impact and Loss Assessment under Changing Land Use and Climate Scenarios' [NE/S00274X/1]
  2. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
  3. Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) [NE/J020052/1]
  4. NERC [NE/R003890/1]
  5. APEX fellowship from the Royal Society, UK [APX/R1/180148]
  6. University of Bristol Research Fellowship
  7. NERC [NE/J020052/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study investigates the linear stability properties of shallow-layer overland flow models with morphodynamics and sedimentary phase motion. It finds that naive formulations of morphodynamics can lead to mathematically ill-posed governing equations, which can be resolved by including neglected physical processes such as turbulent momentum diffusion and bed load sediment transport. The study also shows that steady morphodynamic flows can bifurcate into dilute and concentrated states, with different stability behaviors in response to concentration disturbances.
It is increasingly common for models of shallow-layer overland flows to include equations for the evolution of the underlying bed (morphodynamics) and the motion of an associated sedimentary phase. We investigate the linear stability properties of these systems in considerable generality. Naive formulations of the morphodynamics, featuring exchange of sediment between a well-mixed suspended load and the bed, lead to mathematically ill-posed governing equations. This is traced to a singularity in the linearised system at Froude number that causes unbounded unstable growth of short-wavelength disturbances. The inclusion of neglected physical processes can restore well posedness. Turbulent momentum diffusion (eddy viscosity) and a suitably parametrised bed load sediment transport are shown separately to be sufficient in this regard. However, we demonstrate that such models typically inherit an associated instability that is absent from non-morphodynamic settings. Implications of our analyses are considered for simple generic closures, including a drag law that switches between fluid and granular behaviour, depending on the sediment concentration. Steady morphodynamic flows bifurcate into two states: dilute flows, which are stable at low , and concentrated flows which are always unstable to disturbances in concentration. By computing the growth rates of linear modes across a wide region of parameter space, we examine in detail the effects of specific model parameters including the choices of sediment erodibility, eddy viscosity and bed load flux. These analyses may be used to inform the ongoing development of operational models in engineering and geosciences.

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