Abstract

AbstractThe effects of wind‐driven rain (WDR) on sand detachment were studied under various raindrop obliquities. Results suggested a significant reduction in compressive stress on sand surfaces for a two‐dimensional experimental set‐up in a wind tunnel. During experiments, sand particles in splash cups were exposed to both wind‐free rain (WFR) and WDR driven by horizontal winds of 6.4, 8.9 and 12.8 m s−1and rainfall intensities of 50, 60, 75 and 90‐mm h−1to assess the sand detachment rate (D, in g m−2 s−1). The effects of sand moisture state (dry and wet) on the detachment of different‐sized particles (0.20–0.50 and 0.50–2.00 mm, respectively) were also tested. Factorial analysis of variance showed that shear and compressive stress components evaluated by horizontal and vertical kinetic energy flux terms (KExand KEy, respectively, in J m−2 s−1) along with their vector sum (KEr, in J m−2 s−1) explained the variation inD. Neither sand size nor sand moisture was statistically significant alone although binary interactions of KEr, KExand KEywith the sand size and three‐way interaction of KEx, sand size and moisture were statistically significant. These results can be explained by size‐dependent variation in sand compressibility and surface friction related to the total stress field developed by a given partition of shear and compressive stresses of wind‐driven oblique raindrops (KEx/KEy). Further analysis of the variation of the unit sand detachment rate (Du = D/KEr = g J−1) with rain inclination (α, in degrees) better revealed the effect of WDR obliquity onDuthat further changed with sand size class and moisture state. Finally, the difference in the resulting stress field differentiable by the oblique raindrop trajectories of the experiment over sand surface significantly affected the non‐cohesive particle detachment rates, to some extent interacted with size‐dependent compressibility and interface shear strength of sand grains.

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