Mobility of bidisperse mixtures during bedload transport
R\'emi Chassagne, Rapha\"el Maurin, Julien Chauchat, Philippe Frey

TL;DR
This study investigates how bidisperse particle mixtures move during bedload transport, revealing that small particles enhance overall mobility through granular flow effects and proposing a predictive model for different transport regimes.
Contribution
It introduces a rheology-based model for bidisperse bedload transport, highlighting the role of small particles as a conveyor belt and identifying four transport regimes.
Findings
Bidisperse beds have higher transport rates than monodisperse beds.
Small particles act as a conveyor belt, increasing mobility.
A predictive model accurately reproduces DEM results across various conditions.
Abstract
The flow of segregated bidisperse assemblies of particles is of major importance for geophysical flows and bedload transport in particular. In the present paper, the mobility of bidisperse segregated particle beds was studied with a coupled fluid discrete element method. Large particles were initially placed above small ones and it was observed that, for the same flow conditions, the bedload transport rate is higher in the bidisperse configuration than in the monodisperse one. Depending on the Shields number and on the depth of the interface between small and large particles, different transport phenomenologies are observed, ranging from no influence of the small particles to small particles reaching the bed surface due to diffusive remixing. In cases where the small particles hardly mix with the overlying large particles and for the range of studied size ratios (), it is shown…
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