Hydraulics of sediment‐laden sheetflow and the influence of simulated rainfall
- 1 March 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Earth Surface Processes and Landforms
- Vol. 15 (2) , 101-118
- https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.3290150202
Abstract
Laminar sheetflows, transporting sediment at their capacity rates, both with and without rainfall disturbance, were investigated. Values of flow depth and relative submergence were very small. In the flows without rainfall, measured velocities exceeded the predictions of the smooth‐surface, clear‐water laminar model by an average of 12 per cent. Reduced flow resistance due to high sediment concentrations may explain this result. Velocities in the rainfall‐disturbed flows were not significantly different from the predictions of the smooth‐surface, clear‐water model, and the velocity reduction due to rainfall was about 12 per cent. Although the uniformity of rainfall intensity under the single‐nozzle rainfall simulator is high, variation of momentum and kinetic energy fluxes along the 1‐5 m long flume was significant. The rainfall angle of incidence was highly correlated with deviations from expected flow velocities in the upper and lower sections of the flume.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Roles of Rainfall and Runoff in the Sediment Transport Capacity of Interrill FlowTransactions of the ASAE, 1987
- Effects of Suspended Sediment on the Open‐Channel Velocity DistributionWater Resources Research, 1986
- Simple Model of Sediment‐Laden FlowsJournal of Hydraulic Engineering, 1986
- Sediment Transport Capacity of Overland FlowTransactions of the ASAE, 1985
- Suspended Sediment Effect on Flow ResistanceJournal of Hydraulic Engineering, 1983
- Resistance Equation for Large-Scale RoughnessJournal of the Hydraulics Division, 1981
- VELOCITY PROFILES WITH SUSPENDED SEDIMENTJournal of Hydraulic Research, 1981
- RAINDROP IMPACT STRESSEuropean Journal of Soil Science, 1981
- Splash Amounts from Waterdrop Impact on a Smooth SurfaceWater Resources Research, 1971
- Waterdrop Impact ForcesTransactions of the ASAE, 1965