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      <source-app name="Horizon">Horizon</source-app>
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      <ref-type name="Journal Article">17</ref-type>
      <work-type>ACL : Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture répertoriées par l'AERES</work-type>
      <contributors>
        <authors>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Girolami, L.</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="bold" font="default" size="100%">Roche, Olivier</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Druitt, T. H.</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Corpetti, T.</style>
          </author>
        </authors>
      </contributors>
      <titles>
        <title>Particle velocity fields and depositional processes in laboratory ash flows, with implications for the sedimentation of dense pyroclastic flows</title>
        <secondary-title>Bulletin of Volcanology</secondary-title>
      </titles>
      <pages>747-759</pages>
      <keywords>
        <keyword>Pyroclastic flow</keyword>
        <keyword>Fluidized granular flow</keyword>
        <keyword>Laboratory experiment</keyword>
        <keyword>Velocity profile</keyword>
        <keyword>Progressive aggradation</keyword>
      </keywords>
      <dates>
        <year>2010</year>
      </dates>
      <call-num>fdi:010049707</call-num>
      <language>ENG</language>
      <periodical>
        <full-title>Bulletin of Volcanology</full-title>
      </periodical>
      <isbn>0258-8900</isbn>
      <accession-num>ISI:000280564500009</accession-num>
      <number>6</number>
      <electronic-resource-num>10.1007/s00445-010-0356-9</electronic-resource-num>
      <urls>
        <related-urls>
          <url>https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010049707</url>
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          <url>https://www.documentation.ird.fr/intranet/publi/2010/08/010049707.pdf</url>
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      </urls>
      <volume>72</volume>
      <remote-database-provider>Horizon (IRD)</remote-database-provider>
      <abstract>We conducted laboratory experiments on dam-break flows of sub-250-A mu m volcanic ash, generated by the release of gas-fluidized and variably non-expanded to expanded (up to 35%) beds, in order to gain insights into the internal kinematics of pyroclastic flows. The flows were typically several cm thick and had frontal speeds of up to similar to 2 m s(-1). High-speed videos taken through the transparent sidewall of the 3-m-long channel were analyzed with a particle-tracking algorithm, providing a spatial and temporal description of transport and sedimentation. The flows deposited progressively as they traveled down the flume, being consumed by sedimentation until they ran out of volume. Deposition commenced 5-20 cm rearward of the flow front and (for a given expansion) proceeded at a rate independent of distance from the lock gate. Deposit aggradation velocities were equal to those inferred beneath quasi-static bed collapse tests of the same ash at the same initial expansions, implying that shear rates of up to similar to 300 s(-1) have no measurable effect on aggradation rate. The initially non-expanded (and just fluidized) flow deposited progressively at a rate indicative of an expansion of a few percent, perhaps due to shear-induced Reynolds dilation during initial slumping. The fronts of the flows slid across the flume floor on very thin basal shear layers, but once deposition commenced a no-slip condition was established at the depositional interface. Within the flows, the trajectory of the constituent particles was linear and sub-horizontal. The velocities of the particles increased with height above the depositional interface, reached a maximum, then declined slightly towards the flow surface, perhaps due to air drag. At a given location, the velocity profiles were translated upwards as the deposit aggraded. The results show that even cm-thin, poorly expanded flows of ash deposit progressively, as inferred for many pyroclastic flows. The change from (frontal) slip to (rearward) no-slip conditions at the bases of the laboratory flows are qualitatively consistent with some textural features of pyroclastic flow deposits.</abstract>
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      <custom1>UR163</custom1>
      <custom7>Chine</custom7>
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