Dynamical weakening of pyroclastic flows by mechanical vibrations
Description
Dynamical weakening of dense granular flows plays a critical role on diverse geological events such as seismic faulting and landslides. A common feature of these processes is the development of fluid-solid relative flows that could lead to fluidization by hydrodynamic viscous stresses. Volcanic ash landslides (pyroclastic flows) are characterized by their high mobility often attributed to fluidization of the usually fine and/or low-density particles by their interaction with the entrapped gas. However, the physical mechanism that might drive sustained fluidization of these dense granular flows over extraordinarily long runout distances is elusive. The behavior of volcanic ash in a slowly rotating drum subjected to mechanical vibrations shown in this work suggests that fluid-particle relative oscillations in dense granular flows present in volcanic eruption events can promote pore gas pressure at reduced shear rates as to sustain fluidization.
Abstract
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad CTQ2014-52763-C2-2-R
Additional details
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/69773
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/69773
- Origin repository
- USE