Abstract

The shoal area of the lower Yellow River in China is not flooded with water during the dry season, so various plants can grow. When floods overflow the plains in the flood season, the complexity of water resistance is increased due to the resistance to water flow by vegetation, which directly affects flood discharge in the beach area. The drag force coefficient (CD), Manning’s roughness coefficient (n), and Darcy-Weisbach resistance coefficient (f) are commonly used to characterize vegetation drag force. Such studies are commonly conducted in clear water, but flood water in the lower Yellow River is generally muddy. In order to study the effect of the same sediment content and different sedimentation thicknesses on the resistance of muddy waters containing vegetation, this study conducted experiments in a flume (length = 28 m, width = 0.5 m, and height = 0.5 m) under different deposition thicknesses. The results showed that the vegetation drag force coefficient (CD), vegetation roughness (nb), and Darcy-Weisbach drag coefficient (f) all decreased logarithmically with increasing Reynolds number (Re) and Froude number (Fr). When Re > 30,000, under the conditions of different siltation thicknesses of vegetation, the vegetation roughness tended to stabilize near its minimum value. When the Reynolds number of the water flow is large (Re > 20,000), the variation of the Darcy-Weisbach drag coefficient f slows down with the Reynolds number Re. Logarithmic functions were established for the above resistance coefficients and flow coefficients, and the corresponding correlation coefficients were high, indicating that the conclusions were reliable.

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