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Sediment transport and trench development beneath a cylinder oscillating normal to a sandy seabed
The purpose of this study is to explore the conditions in which trenches form beneath oscillating cylinders – such as pipelines, cables or idealised chains – close to the seabed. Experiments are conducted by oscillating a circular cylinder in a direction normal to an initially flat sandy bed. Across...
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Published in: | Coastal engineering (Amsterdam) 2018-10, Vol.140, p.395-410 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The purpose of this study is to explore the conditions in which trenches form beneath oscillating cylinders – such as pipelines, cables or idealised chains – close to the seabed. Experiments are conducted by oscillating a circular cylinder in a direction normal to an initially flat sandy bed. Across a relatively wide parameter space, the transport patterns and trench geometries reveal three transport regimes that are linked to vortex dynamics and depend primarily on the ratio of oscillation amplitude to cylinder diameter (KC number). For KC≲4 sediment motion results in bedload transport that is symmetric about the cylinder centreline. This leads to the formation of two parallel trenches with a prominent ridge forming directly beneath the cylinder. For 4≲KC≲9 sediment motion occurs via localised transport events, which are associated with the motion of vortices shed from the cylinder. These transport events are irregular but occur on both sides of the cylinder and lead to the formation of a symmetric trench geometry. For 9≲KC≲12 the sediment motion is characterised by localised transport events and asymmetric bedload transport driven by overall vortex dynamics. In terms of trench size, the maximum (equilibrium) depth is found to increase with KC and a mobility number (ψ) defined in terms of the maximum cylinder velocity. The initial rate of trench development also increases with KC number and ψ, with an additional dependency on the cylinder β number. The cylinder motions required to initiate trenching are predicted well using continuity arguments and an oscillatory boundary layer assumption, provided the KC number and minimum gap between the cylinder and the bed are relatively small. The findings in this study provide insight into the mechanisms and prediction of trench formation. In particular, this study reveals that significant trenches can form in sandy seabeds solely due to fluid flow induced by pipeline/cable/chain motion without direct seabed contact, which has implications for structural fatigue.
•Experiments investigate sediment transport and trench formation beneath a cylinder oscillating normal to a sandy bed.•Transport mechanisms and trench geometry linked to pumping of fluid beneath the cylinder and to vortex dynamics.•Control volume arguments combined with an oscillatory boundary layer assumption predict initiation of trenching for small oscillation amplitudes close to the bed.•Rate of trench development and maximum trench depth increase with |
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ISSN: | 0378-3839 1872-7379 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2018.08.006 |