The flow features were analyzed at numerous cross-sections for each simulation. A simulation group with Q1 = 10 L/s for given bed sill heights was selected as the representative case for flow visualizations in this section, while the differences from other cases are highlighted. In the representative case, F1 and F3 ranged from 0.39 to 0.57 and from 0.29 to 0.38, respectively, whereas in the entire set of simulations, F1 ranged from 0.21 to 0.63 and F3 from 0.12 to 0.41.
3.1.1. Main Channel Upstream (x ≤ 0 m)
This section presents and analyzes the time-averaged flow features in the MC upstream. It is important to note here that the flow features in this region are dependent on the downstream conditions of both channels.
At control section 1-1, the influence of
θ and
Br on the approaching flow depth,
d1, and
F1 exhibited consistent trends for all simulations. Overall, the influence of
θ was relatively minor: compared to the
θ = 90° baseline, reducing the diversion angle to 60°, 45°, and 30° resulted in an average increase in
d1 of 1.9%, 2.8%, and 3.7%, respectively, while
F1 increased by an average of 2.9%, 4.4%, and 5.9% across the entire numerical range. However, the effect of
Br was more noticeable. Reducing
Br from 1.00 to 0.50 resulted in an average increase in
d1 of 10.7%, with a peak of 13.9%, while
F1 decreased by an average of 14.0%, with a peak of 20.3%. When
Br was further reduced from 1.00 to 0.25, the average increase in
d1 rose to 20.5%, with a peak of 29.5%, and the average decrease in
F1 reached 24.1%, with a peak of 32.2%. It is worth noting here that the variations in
Qr resulting from changes in
θ and
Br were similar, which will be evaluated in the subsequent section. The greatest changes in
d1 were observed at higher values of
F1 for both
θ and
Br. The variations in
d1 and
F1 with
θ and
Br for
Q1 = 10 L/s are presented in
Figure 4, illustrating the trends discussed above.
For
Q1 = 10 L/s and
Br = 1, the velocity fields just upstream of the bifurcation at
x = −0.01 m are presented in
Figure 5a–d for
θ = 90°, 60°, 45°, and 30°. As the flow approached the bifurcation zone, the water level began to drop along the inner half of the MC while rising along the outer half, consistent with previous observations [
16,
17]. This created a transverse slope that became steeper with increasing values of
F1 and
θ.
At control section 1-1, the velocity distribution was uniform in all simulations. Depending on
Qr and
θ, the flow began to deflect toward the MC inner wall at a certain distance upstream. As illustrated in
Figure 5, the favorable pressure gradient induced by diversion accelerated the flow toward the MC inner wall. Consequently, the streamwise velocity component,
u, attained higher values near the inner wall and lower values toward the outer wall. This transverse variation in
u became more distinct as the
θ increased. The transverse velocity component,
v, was higher near the bed than near the surface, indicating that a greater portion of the diverted water originated from the near-bed region. The magnitude of
v also increased with
θ, which can be explained by two main factors: (i) the reduction in the effective diversion width,
b′, with increasing
θ, which narrows the flow cross-section and, consequently, enhances velocity; and (ii) the increased diversion angle, which aligns the flow direction closer to the transverse axis, thereby increasing the magnitude of the
v component. Physically, the former is a result of tangential acceleration, while the latter is driven by centripetal acceleration. Additionally, a slight increase in
w near the surface along the outer half of the MC reflects the local rise in water level in this region, while a decrease near the surface corresponds to the local reduction in water level described previously.
For
Q1 = 10 L/s and
θ = 90°, the velocity fields at
x = −0.01 m are shown in
Figure 6a,b for
Br = 0.50 and 0.25, respectively. Together with
Figure 5a (where
Br = 1.00), it is observed that decreasing
Br caused a notable increase in flow depth and a proportional reduction in
u. The magnitudes of
v and
w appeared to be negligibly affected near the inner half of the MC, but decreased toward the outer wall as
Br decreased. The transverse slope in water surface extended across the entire MC width when
Br = 1.00, but became progressively restricted toward the inner wall as
Br decreased. For
Br = 0.50, the sloping region covered most of the cross-section, whereas for
Br = 0.25, it was confined to the inner half, leaving the remaining surface nearly flat. Although the overall transverse slope slightly decreased with
Br, the confined sloping region had relatively higher local gradients compared to the average slope observed when
Br = 1.00.
3.1.2. Bifurcation Zone and Main Channel Extension (x > 0 m)
This section presents and analyzes the time-averaged flow features in the bifurcation zone and MC extension.
Along the outer wall of the MC, the flow depth exhibited a gradual increase throughout the bifurcation zone, a trend that extended into the upstream reach of the MC extension, consistent with the previous findings [
16,
17]. Concurrently, at the entrance of the DC, the flow depth initially decreased, reaching a minimum that corresponded to the maximum transverse slope at water surface. Subsequently, the flow depth increased toward the MC extension, resulting in a local surge where the flow impinged upon the downstream corner of the DC and developing a stagnation region. In all of the simulations conducted, the maximum flow depth within the entire channel system occurred in this stagnation region. Ramamurthy et al. [
17] reported that the maximum flow depth within the recirculation zone formed in the MC extension in cases where such a zone developed. This finding contrasts with the present observations. This discrepancy is likely attributable to the substantially higher discharge ratio (
Qr = 0.838) employed in their study; a magnitude not attained in the current study.
The (
u,
v) velocity fields for the bifurcation zone, MC extension, and DC are shown in
Figure 7a,c,e,g for the near-bed region (
z = 1 cm) and in
Figure 7b,d,f,h for the near-surface region (
z = 5 cm), corresponding to the diversion angles
θ = 90°, 60°, 45°, and 30°, respectively. At the bifurcation zone (0 <
x <
b′), velocity fields were presented at
b′/3, 2
b′/3 and
b′ to render them comparable. Along the DC entrance,
u peaked near
b′/3 at
z = 5 cm but prior to
b′/3 at
z = 1 cm. Beyond these peaks, velocity decreased toward the stagnation zone at both depths, aligning with the changes in flow depths. The outer wall of the MC was characterized by an adverse pressure gradient, where
u continued to decrease and eventually became negative. This deceleration resulted in a flow separation and the formation of a recirculation zone within the MC. This type of recirculation zone was previously reported by some researchers [
7,
13,
17], is a consequence of flow expansion, and is associated with the discharge ratio and the flow aspect ratio. Unlike the recirculation zone in the DC, this recirculation zone was wider near the bed and narrowed toward the water surface, a feature also observed in the present study. The recirculation zone in the MC was not observed in all simulations. Since the extent of flow expansion is governed by the width of the divided flow, this recirculation zone only formed near the bed and did not reach the water surface when
Sd/
B exceeded 0.38 or
Qr exceeded 0.46. Such a ‘half’ recirculation zone was also noted by Barkdoll et al. [
33]. When
Sd/
B exceeded 0.44 or
Qr exceeded 0.50, the recirculation zone in the MC typically extended to the water surface. It should be noted here that
Sd/
B and
Qr related through continuity, and this relationship will be detailed in the following section. The recirculation zone never occurred in the MC when
Br = {0.25, 0.50}, and its dimensions increased as
θ decreased.
Similar to those at x = −0.01 m, the influence of θ on u was relatively minor in the bifurcation zone, but was notably higher on v. Near the bed, v reached higher magnitudes, indicating a greater deflection towards the DC entrance compared to near surface flow, with the magnitude of v increasing with θ.
In the upstream reach of the MC extension, a distinct portion of the (
u,
v) field at
z = 1 cm was directed markedly toward the outer wall of MC (
Figure 7a,c,e,f), whereas near the inner wall, the flow remained mostly aligned with the channel axis. Much like the formation of the recirculation zone in the MC, these flow behaviors are governed by the width of the divided flow and
Qr. Near the water surface, the (
u,
v) field was rather oriented with the MC following the flow expansion. The magnitude of
u significantly decreased near the outer wall, approaching zero, although reverse flow did not occur. Expectedly, decreasing
Br resulted in increased flow depths and enhanced flow uniformity in this region.
For
Q1 = 10 L/s and
Br = 1, the velocity fields at
x =
b′ + 0.05 m are presented in
Figure 8a–d for
θ = 90°, 60°, 45°, and 30°. In contrast to the upstream conditions (
x = −0.01 m), flow depth was higher along the MC inner wall. As described in
Section 1, flow impacting the adjacent walls of the downstream corner of the DC led to strong downflows, initiating in a coherent two-leg vortex system. The downflow and the MC-leg of the vortex (V1) are clearly visible in the figures. As V1 propagated downstream, its width increased and it deviated toward the MC outer wall (See
Figure 1). In mobile-bed environments, these vortex legs are known to generate significant scouring at the toe of these walls, namely scour trenches, as previously documented by several researchers [
8,
34,
35,
36].
The streamwise velocity component, u, was reduced in the vortex core, while the other velocity components increased, as expected. u also significantly reduced at the toe of the MC outer wall, eventually becoming negative and indicating flow separation. This reverse flow zone, delineated by a white curve, is where the streamwise velocities are negative, and it does not correspond to the recirculation zone, which also includes the positive values of u and is larger in size. For the reference case, the recirculation zone in the MC extended to the water surface only when θ = 45° and 30°, although it occupied a relatively small area. Finally, u reached its highest magnitudes around the channel center.
The transverse velocity component, v, was higher near the channel center and the water surface, decreasing toward the bed. The vertical velocity component, w, was naturally negative in the downflow region, but remained negligible across the rest of the cross-section. As Br decreased, the flow depth in MC extension increased, causing a proportional decrease in flow velocity. Strength of V1 reduced, it expanded downstream with a smaller deflection and dissipated over a shorter distance.
Overall, the MC extension was characterized by the highest flow depths and the lowest velocities. The influence of θ and Br on d2 and F2 followed the same qualitative trends observed at control section 1-1, although the magnitude of this influence was relatively smaller. The ratio d2/d1 is often considered in theoretical approaches, and is sometimes neglected for low Froude numbers. In this study, d2/d1 was ≈1.0 when F1 < 0.25 for Br = 1.00 and 0.50 and when F1 < 0.35 for Br = 0.25, and can be negligible in this range. However, the ratio becomes pronounced at higher Froude numbers, reaching a peak of d2/d1 = 1.11 for F1 = 0.63 and Br = 1.00. Finally, the Froude number ratio F2/F1 ranged from 0.36 to 0.83, and it was found to increase with θ but decrease as Br decreased.
3.1.3. Diversion Channel (y < 0 m)
This section presents and analyzes the time-averaged flow features in the DC. However, to fully elucidate the flow behaviors in this channel, it is essential to first examine the dividing streamlines before analyzing the water surface and velocity fields.
The dividing streamlines near the surface always ended at the downstream corner of the DC when θ = 90°, regardless of Br and Qr. However, near the bed, the streamlines ‘overshot’ the corner, continuing slightly downstream in the MC extension before turning sharply back into the DC. When θ ≤ 60°, the dividing streamlines never ended at this corner, neither near the surface nor near the bed. The extent of overshoot was relatively minor near the surface when θ = 60° and Br = 1.00, but it increased as θ and Br decreased and F1 increased, particularly near the bed. This behavior must depend on a balance between the inertial forces, which act to resist deflection and maintain the flow’s direction in the MC, and the centripetal forces induced by the transverse pressure gradient, which act to redirect the flow into the diversion channel. A decrease in θ reduces the centripetal force required to redirect the flow, allowing for it to travel further along the main channel before being diverted, while an increase in F1 enhances inertial forces, thereby increasing the overshoot. When Br decreased, F1 also decreased; however, the narrowed entrance width likely led to an increased overshoot.
Consequently, the returning flow into the DC separated from the channel boundary at the downstream corner of the DC and reattached to its outer wall further downstream, creating in a very small recirculation zone. Such recirculation zones were also reported by Lama et al. [
37] for
θ = 30°. The near-surface streamlines and the near-bed streamlines around the downstream corner of the DC are presented in
Figure 9a for
F1 = 0.55,
θ = 60°, and
Br = 1.00 and
Figure 9b for
F1 = 0.42,
θ = 45°, and
Br = 0.25, respectively, as two illustrative examples of mild and excessive overshoots. In these figures, streamlines break where the velocities approach zero.
To obtain the perpendicular velocity components in the cross-sections, a local coordinate system was established with its origin,
O′(
x′,
y′), located at the downstream corner of the DC. In this rotated frame,
x′ and
y′ represent the local transverse and streamwise axes, respectively, where
x′ =
x·sin
θ +
y·cos
θ and
y′ = −
x·cos
θ +
y·sin
θ (See
Figure 2). Accordingly, the transverse and the streamwise velocity components in these directions are
u′ =
u·sin
θ +
v·cos
θ and
v′ = −
u·cos
θ +
v·sin
θ, respectively. For
θ = 90°,
u′ =
u and
v′ =
v. Still, the asymmetric geometry of the DC when
θ ≠ 90° creates challenges for cross-section analyses. For any given cross-section, as
θ decreases, the inner wall boundary of the cross-section shifts further downstream in the DC. For instance, in a cross-section at
y′ = 0, the inner wall boundary corresponds to the upstream corner of the DC when
θ = 90°, whereas it corresponds to a point
b′·cos30 downstream when
θ = 30°. These geometric discrepancies were considered when analyzing the cross-sections, and, therefore, the analyses were often performed on a case-by-case basis. For
Q1 = 10 L/s and
Br = 1, the velocity fields at
y′ = −0.05 m are presented in
Figure 10a–d for
θ = 90°, 60°, 45°, and 30°, representing the entrance region of the DC.
When
θ = 90°, a distinct local surge in water level occurred as the diverted flow hit the outer wall of the DC, a characteristic feature well-documented in the literature [
7,
16,
17]. As
θ decreased to 60°, this surge diminished, and the water level at the inner wall began to decrease further when
θ ≤ 45°. This decrease in the water level can be attributed to the flow separation at the downstream corner of the DC, which, though small when
θ = 60°, enhances significantly as
θ decreases. It should be noted that these surges and drops in water levels, which were followed by standing wave formations, were observed at high Froude numbers and were weaker or negligible when
F1 was relatively low.
In the local coordinate system, negative values of the streamwise component,
v′, indicate the flow direction, while its positive values indicate reverse flow. The highest magnitudes of
v′ and the lowest magnitudes of the transverse velocity component,
u′, were observed when
θ = 30°, suggesting that the diversion was most efficient at this angle. As
θ increased,
v′ progressively diminished while
u′ rose, resulting in lower flow velocity and greater flow non-uniformity. Likewise, in
Figure 8, the white lines delineate the reverse flow zones (regions where
v′ > 0). In these regions, velocity components are very small, and the flow recirculates around the white line, constituting the well-documented recirculation zone in the literature (See
Figure 1). The maximum normalized width of this recirculation zone increased with
θ, whereas its maximum normalized length decreased, aligning with the experimental findings of Gumgum and Cardoso [
8]. However, reducing
Br decreased both the width and the length of the recirculation zone.
In
Figure 10d, a small reverse flow region is visible at the bottom-left corner, incorporated by a small recirculation resulting from the flow separation at this corner, a consequence of the streamline overshoot discussed above.
Figure 10b,c shows that
v′ also decreased at this corner due to the same separation mechanism, but the deceleration was not sufficient to create a reverse flow.
Flow impinging on the outer wall of the DC induced a strong downflow, matching the flow generated on the adjacent wall in the MC extension. Surprisingly, the downward velocity component, w, in this region was the lowest at θ = 90° and increased as θ decreased. This behavior was unexpected, as the flow impacts the wall with the maximum angle of incidence at θ = 90°, which would typically be expected to generate the strongest vertical deflection. However, extensive data analysis revealed that this behavior only occurred when F3 exceeded 0.26. In contrast, when F3 < 0.26, the vertical component always followed the expected pattern, increasing with θ. This is likely caused by the strong flow separation at this corner, which led to a sudden drop in flow depth, and which was more pronounced at higher Froude numbers. To the author’s best knowledge, no prior experimental or numerical study provides comparable velocity field data for varying diversion angles.
The interaction between the downflow and the streamwise flow generated the DC leg of the vortex system (V2 in
Figure 1), pointing out the DC inner wall. This vortex was strongest when
θ = 90° and weakened as
θ decreased (
Figure 10). This behavior aligns with the mobile-bed experiments of Gumgum and Cardoso [
8] and Alomari et al. [
35], who reported that the scouring capacity of this vortex reduces as
θ decreased.
At cross-section 3-3, in contrast to the behavior in the MC, both
d3 and
F3 increased as
θ and
Br decreased across the entire numerical range, although the effect of
θ was relatively minor. Compared to the
θ = 90° baseline, reducing the diversion angle to 60°, 45°, and 30° resulted in an average increase in
d3 of 1.3%, 2.2%, and 3.9%, and in
F3, of 2.7%, 3.9%, and 6.4%, respectively. Once again, the impact of
Br was more pronounced; reducing
Br from 1.00 to 0.50 resulted in average increases of 8.6% in
d3 and 13.7% and, in
F3, with peak increases of 11.7% and 18.5%, respectively. Further reducing
Br from 1.00 to 0.25 led to average increases of 14.7% in
d3 and 25.0% in
F3, with peaks of 19.1% and 29.5%, respectively. Regarding the relationship with the approach flow depth,
d3 was always lower than
d1 when
θ = 60° and 90° across the entire dataset, coinciding with the findings of Ramamurthy et al. [
17] for
θ = 90°. However, the continuous increase in
d3 with decreasing
Br and
θ eventually caused
d3 to exceed
d1 when
θ = 30° for
Br = {0.50, 1.00}. The variations in
d3 and
F3 with
θ and
Br for
Q1 = 10 L/s are presented in
Figure 11, illustrating the trends discussed above.
A series of simulations was conducted to investigate the critical transition in the DC. For
θ = 90°,
Br = 1.00, and a given
Q1, the height of the downstream bed sill gradually decreased until the flow at the throat became critical. It was observed that the flow approached critical conditions at the throat when
F3 reached 0.34, aligning with the findings of Ramamurthy and Satish [
38]. These authors also stated that the flow became upstream-controlled beyond this point. Conversely, Riviére et al. [
39] proposed that the downstream control can persist in the DC, despite the presence of a critical section at the throat, until
F3 reaches 0.65. This disagreement is discussed in detail by Gumgum [
4]; resolving it was outside of the scope of the present work. However, the same
Q1 and bed sill configurations were tested for varying values of
θ and
Br.
A distinct shift in the location of the maximum Froude number,
Fm, was observed depending on the diversion angle. For
θ = 90° and 60°,
Fm was registered at the throat, whereas for
θ = 45° and 30°,
Fm shifted to the region of the water level dip, as shown in
Figure 10c,d. When
Br = 1,
Fm was close to unity across all values of
θ, although
F3 increased to 0.36 when
θ = 30°. However,
Fm decreased significantly as
Br decreased, for instance, by ≈20%, when
Br reduced from 1.0 to 0.5, even as
F3 increased by ≈10%. The critical transition at the throat primarily depends on
Q3, as well as the degree of contraction at the throat, which, in turn, is governed by
Q1 and the downstream conditions in both channels. For a given
Q1, influence of
θ on these global flow parameters was relatively minor. However, reducing
Br led to a significant decrease in
Q3 and a reduction in the relative width of the recirculation zone. Concurrently, both
d3 and
F3 increased. Remarkably, the reduction in
Fm at the throat implies that the narrower DC can sustain higher downstream Froude numbers without choking, thereby allowing for a greater range of
F3 for subcritical flow.