Free alternate bars in rivers: key physical mechanisms and simple
formation criterion
Abstract
Free alternate bars are large-scale, downstream-migrating bedforms
characterized by an alternating sequence of three-dimensional
depositional fronts and scour holes that frequently develop in rivers as
the result of an intrinsic instability of the erodible bed. Theoretical
models based on two-dimensional shallow water and Exner equations have
been successfully employed to capture the bar instability phenomenon,
and to estimate bar properties such as height, wavelength and migration
rate. However, the mathematical complexity of the problem hampered the
understanding of the key physical mechanisms that sustain bar formation.
To fill this gap, we considered a simplified version of the equations,
based on neglecting the deformation of the free surface, which allows us
to: (i) provide the first complete explanation of the bar formation
mechanism as the result of a simple bond between variations of the water
weight and flow acceleration; (ii) derive a simplified, physically based
formula for predicting bar formation in a river reach, depending on
channel width-to-depth ratio, Shields number and relative submergence.
Comparison with an unprecedented large set of laboratory experiments
reveals that our simplified formula appropriately predicts alternate bar
formation in a wide range of conditions. Noteworthy, the hypothesis of
negligible free surface effect also implies that bar formation is fully
independent of the Froude number. We show that this intriguing property
is intimately related to the three-dimensional nature of river bars,
which allows for a gentle lateral deviation of the flow without
significant deformation of the water surface.