23
il Physics 2010 Outline Announcements Todd on aggregates Saturated flow of water

Soil Physics 2010

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Outline. Announcements Todd on aggregates Saturated flow of water. Soil Physics 2010. Announcements. No office hours today Reminder: Homework due Feb. 10 Reminder: Exam Feb. 12 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Outline

• Announcements

• Todd on aggregates

• Saturated flow of water

Page 2: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Announcements

• No office hours today

• Reminder: Homework due Feb. 10

• Reminder: Exam Feb. 12

• Example exam is now posted. Don’t panic! I covered material in a different order that year, and the class was not dual-listed at the 400-level.

Page 3: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Todd on Aggregates

Page 4: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Saturated flow

When is the soil saturated?

Near the surface under heavy rain

Confined aquifer

Under a lake or stream

Recharge basin

Go deep enough…

It turns out that the saturated flow equations are just special (simpler) cases of flow more generally.

Page 5: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

The city of Dijon1800

Ancient capitol fallen on hard times

Page 6: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Paris

Dijon

Lyon

France, 1800s

Political turmoil:• 1804 - 1815 First Empire - Napoleon

• 1815 - 1830 Restoration - Louis XVIII - Charles X

• 1830 - 1848 Bourgeois Monarchy - Louis-Philippe

• 1848 – 1851 Second Republic

• 1852 - 1870 Second Empire - Napoleon III

Page 7: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Henry Darcy

Fellow students at L’École des Ponts et Chaussées*:

CauchyChézy

ColiolisDupuitFresnelNavierPitot

St. Venant

Henry graduated 12th in his class. He had been 1st, but he got violently upset

with a chemistry professor over a question about

cooking.* The school of Bridges and Roads

Page 8: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Most famous publication

Page 9: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Darcy’s experimentreported in Appendix D ofLes Fontaines Publiques…

Page 10: Soil Physics 2010

Henry Darcy

“One does not get the main square in town named in one’s

honor on the basis of some column experiments.”

-- Allan Freeze, 1994Soil Physics 2010

• Public water supply in Dijon: clean, reliable, gravity flow 12 km to 142 public fountains

• 4 km railroad tunnel allowed the main Paris-Lyon track to pass through Dijon

• Several large bridges near Dijon

• Improvements to the Pitot tube

• Extensive studies on:Flow through open channelsFlow through pipesRoad construction

• Near the end of his life, a few studies on flow through sand

Page 11: Soil Physics 2010

Henry Darcy

Soil Physics 2010

“As much as possible, one should favor the free drawing of water because it is necessary for public health. A city that cares for the interest of the poor class should not limit their water, just as daytime and light are not limited.”

Page 12: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Darcy’s experiment

1 m3

2.5 m

• Column filled with sand to different depths

• Different water pressures applied across column

• Discharge Q measured (volume of water / time)

• Experiment repeated with different sands

Page 13: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Darcy’s 3 observations:

1: Q cross-sectional Area2: Q drop in (pressure + elevation)3: Q 1 / flow distance

Page 14: Soil Physics 2010

State of the art

Soil Physics 2010

For slow flow through a pipe,

Q dischargeR radius viscosityp pressure dropL length

L

pRQ

8

4

Mean velocity isL

pRu

8

2

(Poiseuille’s law)

Page 15: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Darcy’s 1st observation

1: Q cross-sectional Area2: Q drop in (pressure + elevation)3: Q 1 / flow distance

Assume zero resistance in pipes

Darcy’s experiments used a vertical column, but a horizontal column is simpler.

Page 16: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Darcy’s 2nd observation

1: Q cross-sectional Area

2: Q drop in (pressure + elevation)3: Q 1 / flow distance

Page 17: Soil Physics 2010

Pressure = Elevation?

When you swim underwater, your ears feel pressure

Why doesn’t the water at the bottom of the pool – under lots of pressure – shoot up to the top?

The energy is the same all through the pool. Surface water has elevation; deep water has pressure.

Dep

th

Pressure

Elevat

ion

Soil Physics 2010

Pressure+ Elevation

Energy

Page 18: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Darcy’s 3rd observation

1: Q cross-sectional Area2: Q drop in (pressure + elevation)

3: Q 1 / flow distance

L

Page 19: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Darcy’s Law as he wrote it

L

zhzhKAQ 2211

HeightWater

pressure

Water volume / unit

time

Length of flow

Cross-sectional area of flow

Proportionality coefficient:Hydraulic

conductivity

Page 20: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Units in Darcy’s Law

L

zhzhKAQ 2211

L

LLL

T

L

T

L 2

3

UnitlessVelocity

Page 21: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Key implications of Darcy’s law: 1

L

hhKAQ 12

For flow through a uniform medium, the hydraulic gradient is constant.

02 h

Taking the derivative of Darcy’s law,

gives the Laplace equation,

hKq

Page 22: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Key implications of Darcy’s law: 2

The flow is linearly proportional to the gradient.This puts Darcy’s law into the same class as several other equations:

Hooke’s law (elasticity)

Darcy’s law (hydraulic conductivity)

Ohm’s law (electrical conductivity)

Fourier’s law (heat conduction)

Fick’s law (diffusion)

hKq

Vj Tqh CDf

E

1

Page 23: Soil Physics 2010

Soil Physics 2010

Key implications of Darcy’s law: 3

K is a property of the medium*.

The hydraulic conductivity K is not changed by whether the water flows up instead of down, or by having a greater or smaller gradient, or by the pressures or elevations themselves.

In fact, K can often be predicted with reasonable accuracy, given some other information about the medium. For example, the porosity and the grain size or pore size distribution allow a fair estimate.

* Also of the fluid – see later