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Buoyancy-driven exchange flows arise in the natural and built environment wherever bodies of fluids at different densities are connected by a narrow constriction. In this paper we study these flows in the laboratory using the canonical stratified inclined duct experiment, which sustains an exchange flow in an inclined duct of rectangular cross-section over long time periods (Meyer (ii) two-layer frictional hydraulics; (iii) turbulent mixing models. While these models provide significant qualitative and quantitative descriptions of the experimental results, they also highlight the need for further progress on shear-driven turbulent flows and their interfacial waves, layering, intermittency and mixing properties.
Lefauve et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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