Tag: fluid dynamics

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    Michigan Dam Failure

    Last week Michigan’s Edenville Dam failed, triggering catastrophic flooding. While the exact causes of dam’s failure are not yet clear, this video of the collapse provides some interesting hints.

    As the video begins, we see water that’s already trickled down the slope, potentially a sign that the top of the dam has already degraded. Then a noticeable bulge forms near the bottom of the earthwork slope, followed quickly by a landslide. Water doesn’t pour out immediately, though. That delay suggests that only part of the dam’s thickest section failed in the landslide. During the delay, the remaining interior of the dam is failing from the sudden lack of support. Then, the floodwaters come pouring out.

    From the sequence of events, it seems likely that the dam was suffering from soil liquefaction prior to the collapse. With high water levels behind the dam, pressure can drive water into the soil beneath the dam, reducing its strength. You can see this effect in action in this video and this one. For more on the Edenville dam specifically, check out the great analysis over at AGU from Dave Petley (1, 2).

    Sadly, failures like these are quite avoidable, provided dams are properly maintained. Climate change is drastically altering precipitation patterns across the world, and without updating and reworking our infrastructure to account for that, we’ll see more failures like this in the future. (Video and image credit: L. Coleman/MLive; via Earther; see also D. Petley 1, 2)

  • Particle-filled Splashes

    Particle-filled Splashes

    Adding particles to a liquid can significantly alter its splash dynamics, as shown in this new study. In the first image, a purely-liquid droplet spreads on impact into a thin liquid sheet that destabilizes from the rim inward, ripping itself into a spray of droplets. At first glance, the particle-filled droplet in the second image behaves similarly; it, too, spreads and then disintegrates. But there are distinctive differences.

    During expansion, the particles increase the drop’s effective viscosity, meaning that the splash sheet does not expand as far. That apparent viscosity increase is also part of why the drops the splash sheds are bigger than those without particles. The other part of that story comes from the retraction, where the variations in thickness caused by the particles and their menisci create preferential paths for the flow. As a result, the particle-filled splash breaks up faster and into larger droplets compared to its purely-liquid counterpart. (Image and research credit: P. Raux et al.)

  • Updating Undergraduate Heat Transfer

    Updating Undergraduate Heat Transfer

    For many engineering students, their first exposure to fluid dynamics comes in a heat transfer class. The typical focus in these classes is not on the underlying physics but on learning to use empirical formulas and correlations that are used in engineering heat exchangers, computer fans, and other applications.

    As part of this, students are presented with an extremely simplified view of classical flows like flow over a flat wall, known as a flat-plate boundary layer. Students are told that there are two main features of this and other flows: a laminar region where flow is smooth and orderly, and a turbulent region where flow is chaotic and better at mixing. The transition between these two, according to the undergraduate picture, takes place at a particular point that can be calculated as part of the correlation.

    The problem with this picture is that it grossly oversimplifies the actual physics, and for students who may not take dedicated, graduate-level fluid dynamics courses, leaves future engineers with a false understanding that may impact their designs. The truth of transition is far more complicated and nuanced. Transition from laminar to turbulent flow rarely takes place at a single, predictable point; instead it takes place over an extended region and where it begins depends on factors like geometry, vibration, and the level of turbulence already present in the flow.

    In an effort to bring undergraduate heat transfer correlations more in line with actual physics — as well as with real, experimental data — a new study revamps the mathematical models. Personally, I applaud any effort to add some nuance to the introduction of this important topic. (Image and research credit: J. Lienhard; via phys.org)

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    “Focus, Vol. 2”

    This short film from photographer Roman De Giuli focuses on ethereal and abstract fluids. What you’re watching is primarily paint, with a little in the way of flow additives. There’s lovely marbling and some impressively sharp edges, but mostly you can just sit back and enjoy the flow! (Image and video credit: R. De Giuli)

  • The Naruto Whirlpools

    The Naruto Whirlpools

    Enormous whirlpools are not simply the work of overactive imaginations. There are several spots in the world, including Japan’s Naruto Strait, that regularly see these spectacular vortices.

    Naruto’s whirlpools are formed through the interaction of tidal currents with the local topography. Spring tides funneled through the vee-shaped strait can reach speeds of 20 kph as they rush between the Pacific Ocean and the Inland Sea. Below the surface, there’s also a deep depression that helps bring the tides together in such a way that it generates vortices 20 meters in diameter.

    In normal times, the whirlpools are a significant tourist attraction during the springtime. Travelers can view them from tour boats, helicopters, and from the Onaruto Bridge. (Image credits: whirlpools – Mainichi/N. Yamada, Discover Tokushima; artwork: Hiroshige; via Mainichi; submitted by Alan M.)

  • Fractal Flame Propagation

    Fractal Flame Propagation

    Hydrogen is a promising alternative to carbon-based fuels, but it comes with its own special challenges. Hydrogen gas is extremely flammable, including under circumstances that would normally quench flames, as shown in this recent study.

    What you see above are water condensation patterns left behind after the passage of hydrogen flames through a narrow gap between two glass plates. With other fuels, the narrow confinement and low fuel ratio used in these experiments would keep the flames from spreading. But because hydrogen is so light, it diffuses much faster than other fuels, allowing it to spread in these fractal patterns despite its confinement. Engineers will have to account for hydrogen’s easy spread when designing containment strategies. (Image and research credit: F. Veiga-López et al.; via APS Physics)

  • Bubble Dynamics Govern Faster Pouring

    Bubble Dynamics Govern Faster Pouring

    We’re all familiar with the problem of pouring a liquid from a narrow-necked bottle. To a certain extent, tilting the bottle further will reduce the time it takes to empty, but if you tilt too far, your smooth pour becomes violent glugging as bubbles forming at the bottle’s mouth block liquid from exiting.

    Researchers find that the time it takes to empty a bottle depends both on the qualities of the liquid — its viscosity and surface tension — and on the geometry of the bottle. In particular, they found that the shape of the bottle influences how quickly bubbles grow at the bottle’s mouth when tilted to the critical angle. Their findings suggest that higher tilt angles and faster pours can be achieved by optimizing bottle geometry. (Image and research credit: L. Rohilla and A. Das; via phys.org)

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    Aerosol Transport

    NASA Goddard has produced another gorgeous visualization of how various aerosols move around our world. This visualization is constructed from data collected between August 2019 and January 2020, which means that it captures numerous typhoons as well as the extreme bushfires that occurred in Australia.

    Different colors represent different aerosol sources: carbon (red), sulfate (green), dust (orange), sea salt (blue), and nitrate (pink). The brighter the color, the higher the concentration of aerosols. With this, we see steady patterns of natural sea salt transport and the billowing flow of dust from Saharan Africa. But we can also see manmade pollution from sources across the Northern Hemisphere, as well as major output from the Australian bushfires. It’s a good reminder that none of us is truly isolated in this interconnected world of ours. (Video and image credit: NASA Goddard; via Flow Vis)

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    Building Ferrofluid Sculptures

    Eric Mesplé is an artist, but he’s also a blacksmith, welder, programmer, engineer, and innovator. Many of his sculptures feature ferrofluids, magnetic liquid whose movement is driven by electromagnets Mesplé designs and builds himself. In this video from Wired, we get a behind-the-scenes look at some of his work, and to me, one of the big takeaways is just how clearly science, engineering, and technology are married to art in Mesplé’s work. I imagine this is true of many of today’s artists! (Video credit: Wired)

  • Studying Active Polymers Using Worms

    Studying Active Polymers Using Worms

    I’ve covered some odd studies in my time, but this might be the strangest: to understand how active polymers affect viscosity, researchers loaded drunk worms into a rheometer. Active polymers are long-chain molecules that, like worms, can move on their own using stored energy or by extracting energy from their surroundings. Their dynamics are tough to study, though, because individual polymers are almost impossible to observe while a suspension of them is being deformed.

    Enter the humble sludge worm. Often sold as fish food, these worms — like the polymers they’re meant to imitate — are individually quite wiggly but, given their size, are far easier to observe. Researchers placed them in a custom rheometer in a solution of water and observed how the worm mass responded when sheared by a spinning top plate (Image 3). Like active polymers, the worms exhibited shear-thinning; the faster the plate spun, the lower the worms’ viscosity, likely because the additional force helps align the worms.

    But how do active worms compare with passive ones? The obvious solution would be to repeat their tests with dead worms, but the researchers found a more humane method: by adding some alcohol to the water, they temporarily reduced the worms’ activity, allowing them to compare active and passive worms (Image 2). Once rinsed in water, the worms sobered up and returned to their normal activity levels.

    The researchers found that both the active and passive worms exhibited shear-thinning as the force on them increased, but the shear-thinning in the active worms was not as pronounced, presumably because the movements of individual worms prevented them from aligning smoothly. (Image and research credit: A. Deblais et al.; via Gizmodo and APS Physics)