The compressible granular collapse in a fluid as a continuum: validity of a Navier-Stokes model with $\mu(J)$-$\phi(J)$-rheology
Matthias Rauter

TL;DR
This paper extends the Navier-Stokes model with $$- and $$-rheology to accurately simulate subaquatic granular flows by including pore pressure, dilatancy, and drag effects, validated against experiments and revealing complex flow phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a compressible $$-$$-rheology model for submerged granular flows, incorporating pore pressure and drag, and implements it in OpenFOAM for comprehensive simulations.
Findings
Good agreement with low Stokes number experiments
Incompressible models fail to capture key behaviors
Revealed phenomena include apparent cohesion and hydroplaning
Abstract
The incompressible -rheology has been used to study subaerial granular flows with remarkable success. For subaquatic granular flows, drag between grains and the pore fluid is substantially higher and the physical behaviour is more complex. High drag forces constrain the rearrangement of grains and dilatancy, leading to a considerable build-up of pore pressure. Its transient and dynamic description is the key to modelling subaquatic granular flows but out of the scope of incompressible models. In this work, we advance from the incompressible -rheology to the compressible --rheology to account for pore pressure, dilatancy, and the scaling laws under subaquatic conditions. The model is supplemented with critical state theory to yield the correct properties in the quasi-static limit. The pore fluid is described by an additional set of conservation equations…
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