scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulation of breaking waves using the high-order spectral method with laboratory experiments: wave-breaking energy dissipation

TLDR
In this paper, a wave-breaking mechanism is implemented into a nonlinear potential flow solver, which is used to solve for the free surface in a numerical wave tank using the high-order spectral (HOS) method.
Abstract
We examine the implementation of a wave-breaking mechanism into a nonlinear potential flow solver. The success of the mechanism will be studied by implementing it into the numerical model HOS-NWT, which is a computationally efficient, open source code that solves for the free surface in a numerical wave tank using the high-order spectral (HOS) method. Once the breaking mechanism is validated, it can be implemented into other nonlinear potential flow models. To solve for wave-breaking, first a wave-breaking onset parameter is identified, and then a method for computing wave-breaking associated energy loss is determined. Wave-breaking onset is calculated using a breaking criteria introduced by Barthelemy et al. (J Fluid Mech https://arxiv.org/pdf/1508.06002.pdf , submitted) and validated with the experiments of Saket et al. (J Fluid Mech 811:642–658, 2017). Wave-breaking energy dissipation is calculated by adding a viscous diffusion term computed using an eddy viscosity parameter introduced by Tian et al. (Phys Fluids 20(6): 066,604, 2008, Phys Fluids 24(3), 2012), which is estimated based on the pre-breaking wave geometry. A set of two-dimensional experiments is conducted to validate the implemented wave breaking mechanism at a large scale. Breaking waves are generated by using traditional methods of evolution of focused waves and modulational instability, as well as irregular breaking waves with a range of primary frequencies, providing a wide range of breaking conditions to validate the solver. Furthermore, adjustments are made to the method of application and coefficient of the viscous diffusion term with negligible difference, supporting the robustness of the eddy viscosity parameter. The model is able to accurately predict surface elevation and corresponding frequency/amplitude spectrum, as well as energy dissipation when compared with the experimental measurements. This suggests the model is capable of calculating wave-breaking onset and energy dissipation successfully for a wide range of breaking conditions. The model is also able to successfully calculate the transfer of energy between frequencies due to wave focusing and wave breaking. This study is limited to unidirectional waves but provides a valuable basis for future application of the wave-breaking model to a multidirectional wave field. By including parameters for removing energy due to wave-breaking into a nonlinear potential flow solver, the risk of developing numerical instabilities due to an overturning wave is decreased, thereby increasing the application range of the model, including calculating more extreme sea states. A computationally efficient and accurate model for the generation of a nonlinear random wave field is useful for predicting the dynamic response of offshore vessels and marine renewable energy devices, predicting loads on marine structures, and in the study of open ocean wave generation and propagation in a realistic environment.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Applicability and limitations of highly non-linear potential flow solvers in the context of water waves

TL;DR: In this paper, a general overview of the practical applicability of non-linear potential flow solvers for water wave propagation is presented, and the influence of discretization, water depth, directional spreading and spectral peakedness on the limitations in the use of such nonlinear potential models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting the breaking strength of gravity water waves in deep and intermediate depth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use a finite-volume Navier-Stokes solver with large-eddy simulation resolution and volume-of-fluid surface reconstruction to predict the strength of breaking 2D and 3D gravity water waves, quantified by the amount of wave energy dissipated per breaking event.
Journal ArticleDOI

A unified breaking onset criterion for surface gravity water waves in arbitrary depth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the validity and robustness of the Barthelemy et al. (2018) breaking wave onset prediction framework for surface gravity water waves in arbitrary water depth, including shallow water breaking over varying bathymetry.
Posted Content

Predicting the breaking strength of gravity water waves

TL;DR: In this paper, a finite-volume Navier-Stokes solver with LES resolution and volume-of-fluid surface reconstruction was used to simulate wave packet evolution, breaking onset and post-breaking evolution for representative cases of wave packets with breaking.

Current generation by deep-water breaking waves

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the partitioning of the energy transferred to the water column by deep-water wave breaking, in this case between the turbulent and mean flow, and found that more than 95 % of the total energy lost by the wave field is dissipated in the first four wave periods after the breaking event.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Boussinesq modeling of wave transformation, breaking, and runup. ii: 2d

TL;DR: In this article, an extended Boussinesq model for surf zone hydrodynamics in two horizontal dimensions is implemented and verified using an eddy viscosity term.
Journal ArticleDOI

A high-order spectral method for the study of nonlinear gravity waves

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a robust numerical method for modeling nonlinear gravity waves which is based on the Zakharov equation/mode-coupling idea but is generalized to include interactions up to an arbitrary order M in wave steepness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laboratory Measurements of Deep-Water Breaking Waves

TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed velocity survey of the breaking region was made and ensemble averages taken of the non-stationary flow was taken to investigate the influence of breaking on the evolution of the wave field.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new numerical method for surface hydrodynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a new numerical method for studying the evolution of free and bound waves on the nonlinear ocean surface using a slope expansion of the velocity potential at the free surface and not an expansion about a reference surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shock-capturing non-hydrostatic model for fully dispersive surface wave processes

TL;DR: NHWAVE as mentioned in this paper is a shock-capturing non-hydrostatic model for simulating wave refraction, diffraction, shoaling, breaking and landslide-generated tsunami in finite water depth.
Related Papers (5)