A two phase flow CFD model has been developed for 2D spilling breaking wave simulations. A mass conservative level set method similar to Olsson and Kreiss [Olsson E, Kreiss G. A conservative level set method for two phase flow. J Comput Phys 2005;210(1):225-46] is implemented for capturing the air-w
Large-Wave Simulation (LWS) of Free-Surface Flows Developing Weak Spilling Breaking Waves
โ Scribed by Athanassios A. Dimas; Laurie T. Fialkowski
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 324 KB
- Volume
- 159
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9991
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A methodology, called large-wave simulation (LWS), is presented for the numerical simulation of free-surface flows past the appearance of spilling breakers. LWS is designed to resolve only the large, energy-carrying scales of the flow and model the effect of the subgrid, small-wavelength scales of the flow spectrum. This part of the spectrum includes the characteristic frothy whitecaps associated with spilling breakers. Modeling in LWS is based on the consistent application of spatial filtering on both the velocity field and the free-surface elevation. The subgrid scale (SGS) effect is modeled by two sets of stresses: (i) the eddy SGS stresses, which are identical to the ones arising in large-eddy-simulation of flows without a free surface, and (ii) the wave SGS stresses, which incorporate the free-surface effect. Both SGS stresses are modeled by eddy-viscosity models with constant coefficients. The methodology is applied on two free-surface flows: (i) the interaction of a plane gravity wave with a surface wake layer, and (ii) the nonlinear evolution of a surface shear layer instability. A priori and a posteriori tests show good agreement between the proposed model and actual SGS stresses, while LWS of both flows successfully continue past the breaking point as opposed to corresponding direct numerical simulations. For the first flow, LWS predicts the postbreaking appearance of a recirculating flow region in the wake of the breaker in qualitative agreement with experimental observations.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract In this work, we determine the different patterns of possible wave structures that can be observed on a thin film flowing on an inclined plane when at the free surface a shear force (surface traction) is applied. Different wave structures are obtained dependening on the selected combina