Laboratory Study Investigating the Three-dimensional Turbulence and Kinematic Properties Associated with a Breaking Solitary Wave

A laboratory experiment was performed to investigate the three-dimensional turbulence and kinematic properties that develop due to a breaking solitary and an irregular shallow water bathymetry. A large basin equipped with a piston-type wavemaker was used to generate the wave, while the free surface...

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Main Author: Swigler, David Townley
Other Authors: Lynett, Patrick
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-821
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2009-08-8212013-01-08T10:41:24ZLaboratory Study Investigating the Three-dimensional Turbulence and Kinematic Properties Associated with a Breaking Solitary WaveSwigler, David TownleyTurbulenceBreaking waveSolitary waveThree-dimensional laboratory studyA laboratory experiment was performed to investigate the three-dimensional turbulence and kinematic properties that develop due to a breaking solitary and an irregular shallow water bathymetry. A large basin equipped with a piston-type wavemaker was used to generate the wave, while the free surface elevations and fluid velocities were measured using wave gauges and three-dimensional acoustic-Doppler velocimeters (ADVs), respectively. From the free surface elevations, the evolution and runup of the wave was revealed; while from the ADVs, the velocity and turbulent energy was determined to identify specific turbulent events and coherent structures. It was found that shoaling was confined to areas with gentler sloping bathymetry near the basin side walls and the runup shoreward of the still water shoreline was not uniform. The runup was characterized by a jetting mechanism caused by the convergence of water mass near the basin centerline as the wave refracted during breaking. The jetting mechanism caused the greatest cross-shore velocities to be located near the basin centerline. The greatest turbulent events were well correlated to borefronts, resembling hydraulic jumps, where the greatest shear and fluid accelerations occurred. Because of an abrupt change in the bathymetry, a coherent structure developed which was found to have a three-dimensional flow field. It was proposed that variations in the internal flow with depth were due to the orientation of multiple vortex rings.Lynett, Patrick2010-10-12T22:31:02Z2010-10-14T15:59:52Z2010-10-12T22:31:02Z2010-10-14T15:59:52Z2009-082010-10-12August 2009BookThesisElectronic Thesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-821en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Turbulence
Breaking wave
Solitary wave
Three-dimensional laboratory study
spellingShingle Turbulence
Breaking wave
Solitary wave
Three-dimensional laboratory study
Swigler, David Townley
Laboratory Study Investigating the Three-dimensional Turbulence and Kinematic Properties Associated with a Breaking Solitary Wave
description A laboratory experiment was performed to investigate the three-dimensional turbulence and kinematic properties that develop due to a breaking solitary and an irregular shallow water bathymetry. A large basin equipped with a piston-type wavemaker was used to generate the wave, while the free surface elevations and fluid velocities were measured using wave gauges and three-dimensional acoustic-Doppler velocimeters (ADVs), respectively. From the free surface elevations, the evolution and runup of the wave was revealed; while from the ADVs, the velocity and turbulent energy was determined to identify specific turbulent events and coherent structures. It was found that shoaling was confined to areas with gentler sloping bathymetry near the basin side walls and the runup shoreward of the still water shoreline was not uniform. The runup was characterized by a jetting mechanism caused by the convergence of water mass near the basin centerline as the wave refracted during breaking. The jetting mechanism caused the greatest cross-shore velocities to be located near the basin centerline. The greatest turbulent events were well correlated to borefronts, resembling hydraulic jumps, where the greatest shear and fluid accelerations occurred. Because of an abrupt change in the bathymetry, a coherent structure developed which was found to have a three-dimensional flow field. It was proposed that variations in the internal flow with depth were due to the orientation of multiple vortex rings.
author2 Lynett, Patrick
author_facet Lynett, Patrick
Swigler, David Townley
author Swigler, David Townley
author_sort Swigler, David Townley
title Laboratory Study Investigating the Three-dimensional Turbulence and Kinematic Properties Associated with a Breaking Solitary Wave
title_short Laboratory Study Investigating the Three-dimensional Turbulence and Kinematic Properties Associated with a Breaking Solitary Wave
title_full Laboratory Study Investigating the Three-dimensional Turbulence and Kinematic Properties Associated with a Breaking Solitary Wave
title_fullStr Laboratory Study Investigating the Three-dimensional Turbulence and Kinematic Properties Associated with a Breaking Solitary Wave
title_full_unstemmed Laboratory Study Investigating the Three-dimensional Turbulence and Kinematic Properties Associated with a Breaking Solitary Wave
title_sort laboratory study investigating the three-dimensional turbulence and kinematic properties associated with a breaking solitary wave
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-821
work_keys_str_mv AT swiglerdavidtownley laboratorystudyinvestigatingthethreedimensionalturbulenceandkinematicpropertiesassociatedwithabreakingsolitarywave
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