Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Article Citation - WoS: 5Citation - Scopus: 5Kinematic Wave Theory for Transient Bed Sediment Waves in Alluvial Rivers(American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), 2008) Singh, Vijay P.; Tayfur, GökmenTransient bed sediment waves in alluvial rivers have been described using a multitude of hydraulic formulations. These formulations are based on some form of the St. Venant equations and conservation of mass of sediment in suspension and in bed. Depending on the assumptions employed, a hierarchy of formulations is expressed. These formulations in the literature employ uncoupled, semicoupled, or fully coupled transport models treating the sediment waves as either hyperbolic (dynamic wave) or parabolic (diffusion wave). It is, however, hypothesized that the movement of bed sediment waves in alluvial rivers can be described as a kinematic wave. Kinematic wave theory employs a functional relation between sediment transport rate and concentration and a relation between flow velocity and depth. This study summarizes the hierarchy of the formulations while emphasizing the kinematic wave theory for describing transient bed sediment waves. The applicability of the theory is shown for laboratory flume data and hypothetical cases.Article Citation - WoS: 33Citation - Scopus: 38Modeling Two-Dimensional Erosion Process Over Infiltrating Surfaces(American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), 2001) Tayfur, GökmenThe physics-based modeling of the rainfall-runoff induced erosion process is accomplished. The existing one-dimensional erosion process equations are extended to two dimensions and kinematic wave approximation is used. The model assumes that suspended sediment does not affect flow dynamics. The model considers the effect of flow depth plus loose soil depth on soil detachment. Sensitivity analysis results indicate that the effects of the soil erodibility coefficient (η) and exponent (k1) on sediment discharges are quite pronounced. On steep slopes, the effect of flow depth plus loose soil depth on sediment discharge is insignificant.
