Incipient motion of a single particle on a regular substrate in an oscillatory flow

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Abstract

We investigate and model the initiation of motion of a single particle on a structured substrate within an oscillatory boundary layer flow, following a mechanistic approach. By deterministically relating forces and torques acting on the particle to the instantaneous ambient flow, the effects of flow unsteadiness are captured, revealing rich particle dynamics. Laboratory experiments in an oscillatory flow tunnel characterise the initiation and early stages of motion, with particle imaging velocimetry measurements yielding the flow conditions at the motion threshold. The experiments validate and complement results from particle-resolved direct numerical simulations, combining an immersed boundary method with a discrete element method that incorporates a static friction contact model. Within the parameter range just above the motion threshold, the mobile particle rolls without sliding over the substrate, indicating that motion initiation is governed by an unbalanced torque rather than a force. Both experimental and numerical results show excellent agreement with an analytical torque balance including hydrodynamic torque derived from the theoretical Stokes velocity profile, and contributions of lift, added mass and externally imposed pressure gradient. In addition to static and rolling particle states, we identify a wiggling regime where the particle moves but does not leave its original pocket. Our deterministic approach enables prediction of the phase within the oscillation cycle at which the particle starts moving, without relying on empirical threshold estimates, and can be extended to a wide range of flow and substrate conditions, as long as turbulence is absent and interactions with other mobile particles are negligible.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberA12
Number of pages40
JournalJournal of Fluid Mechanics
Volume1027
Early online date14 Jan 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25 Jan 2026

Funding

Marco Mazzuoli was supported under the subaward no. SUB00004180 of the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA (PTE Federal award no. N00173-21-2-C900). The simulations were partly performed using the CINECA HPC facilities under the ISCRA-b project SEAWAVES no. HP10BPMJZR.

Keywords

  • multiphase and particle-laden flows
  • particle/fluid flow
  • sediment transport

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