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Effect of Emerged Coastal Vegetation on Wave Attenuation Using Open Source CFD Tool: REEF3D

TLDR
In this paper, an artificial, rigid, emerged vegetation for a length of 2 m is developed in a numerical wave tank of REEF3D. The model is tested for regular waves of height 0.08, 0.12, and 0.16 m and wave periods of 1.8 and 2 s in a water depth of 0.45 m.
Abstract
Coastal vegetation is a soft solution for protecting the coast from the action of waves by attenuating the wave height and reducing the energy of the waves. Effect of wave height attenuation as a result of the presence of emerged coastal vegetation is studied numerically by resolving the Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) equations. A three-dimensional numerical wave tank model is simulated using an open source computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software REEF3D, and wave attenuation due to emerged coastal vegetation is determined. An artificial, rigid, emerged vegetation for a length of 2 m is developed in a numerical wave tank of REEF3D. The model is tested for regular waves of height 0.08, 0.12, and 0.16 m and wave periods of 1.8 and 2 s in a water depth of 0.40 and 0.45 m. The wave heights are measured at different locations along the vegetation meadow at 0.5 m intervals. The devolved numerical model is corroborated by comparing the obtained numerical results with the experimental results as reported by John et al. (Experimental investigation of wave attenuation through artificial vegetation meadow, ISH—HYDRO, [1]). The numerically obtained results are concurrent with the experimental results.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Comparison of Different Wave Modelling Techniques in An Open-Source Hydrodynamic Framework

TL;DR: The performance of the different modules of REEF3D is validated and compared using several benchmark cases, which range from simple propagations of regular waves to three-dimensional wave breaking over a changing bathymetry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benefits of vegetation for mitigating wave impacts on vertical seawalls

TL;DR: In this paper , a computational fluid dynamic model is used to quantify wave forces and moments on a laboratory-scale vertical seawall in the presence and absence of vegetation, and the simulated forces are analyzed to calculate the sliding force and overturning moment and quantify the benefit of vegetation for reducing the seawall failure incidents and increasing the factor of safety.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative delimitation of radiant belt toward lake of lake-terrestrial ecotone

TL;DR: In this article , a novel approach was developed for quantitative delimitation of the radiant belt toward Lake Taihu, which determined a theoretical boundary of lake-terrestrial ecotone, which is helpful to a more precise protection and restoration of large shallow lakes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient implementation of essentially non-oscillatory shock-capturing schemes,II

TL;DR: Two methods of sharpening contact discontinuities-the subcell resolution idea of Harten and the artificial compression idea of Yang, which those authors originally used in the cell average framework-are applied to the current ENO schemes using numerical fluxes and TVD Runge-Kutta time discretizations.
Journal ArticleDOI

A level set approach for computing solutions to incompressible two-phase flow

TL;DR: A level set method for capturing the interface between two fluids is combined with a variable density projection method to allow for computation of two-phase flow where the interface can merge/break and the flow can have a high Reynolds number.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient implementation of essentially non-oscillatory shock-capturing schemes, II

TL;DR: This work extends earlier work on the efficient implementation of ENO (essentially non-oscillatory) shock-capturing schemes by providing a new simplified expression for the ENO constructio...

A level set approach for computing solutions to incompressible two- phase flow II

TL;DR: In this article, a level set method for capturing the interface between two fluids is combined with a variable density projection method to allow for computation of two-phase flow where the interface can merge/break and the flow can have a high Reynolds number.
Journal ArticleDOI

Weighted ENO Schemes for Hamilton--Jacobi Equations

TL;DR: A weighted ENO scheme is presented to approximate the viscosity solution of the Hamilton--Jacobi equation and can be as high as fifth order accurate in the smooth part of the solution.
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