scholarly journals Well-balanced and shock-capturing solving of 3D shallow-water equations involving rapid wetting and drying with a local 2D transition approach

2020 ◽  
Vol 364 ◽  
pp. 112897 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinhua Lu ◽  
Bing Mao ◽  
Xiaofeng Zhang ◽  
Shi Ren
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shangzhi Chen ◽  
Feifei Zheng ◽  
Qingzhou Zhang

<p>With the possible climate change and increased pace of urbanization in the century, urban flooding has caused more and more attentions nowadays. Shallow water equations are widely used to reproduce the flow hydrodynamics of flooding around the urban areas, which have been proved a powerful tool for flood risk assessment and evacuation management, like river flow or flowing at drainage networks with irregular cross-sections at 1D scale. Over the last two decades, Godunov-type schemes have became popular for its robustness treating complex flow phenomenons. When tacking complex topography in the framework of Godunov-type scheme, sourer term needs to be treated property to preserve steady state, that flux gradient and sourer term are balanced. Capart et al. (2003) reconstructed the momentum flux by considering the balance of hydrostatic pressure with the approximated water surface level, which has the ability to tackle the irregular and non-prismatic channel flow with complex topography. This approximation is exact for two cases: 1) rectangular and prismatic channel; 2) water surface is horizontal. However, for other cases, approximation is employed to achieve the hydrostatic equilibrium, which has reduced the accuracy of the numerical solution and increased the complexity for the model implementation. </p><p>In this work, we present a new well-balanced numerical scheme for simulating 1D frictional shallow water flow with irregular cross-sections over complex topography involving wetting and drying. The proposed scheme solves, in a finite volume Godunov-type framework, a set of pre-balanced shallow water equations derived by considering pressure balancing (Liang and Marche, 2009). HLL approximated Riemann solver is adopted for the flux calculation at the cell interface. Non-negative reconstruction of Riemann state (Audusse et al., 2004) and local bed modification (Liang, 2010) produce stable and well-balanced solutions to shallow water flow hydrodynamics. Bed slope source term can be approximated using central difference and no special treatment is needed for wet and dry bed. The friction source term is discretized using a splitting implicit scheme and limiting value of friction force is used to ensure stability for the dry bottom (Liang and Marche, 2009). The new numerical scheme is validated against two theoretical benchmark tests and then compared with the validated shallow water model with circular and trapezoid cross-sections over complex topography involving wetting and drying. This method is also possible to reproduce the mixed flow in the conduit or for the flow with non-prismatic channel like river flow in the near future.</p><p>References</p><p>Audusse, E., Bouchut, F., Bristeau, M. O., Klein, R., & Perthame, B. T. (2004). A fast and stable well-balanced scheme with hydrostatic reconstruction for shallow water flows. SIAM Journal on Scientific Computing, 25(6), 2050-2065.</p><p>Capart, H, Eldho, TI, Huang, SY, Young, DL, and Zech, Yves, "Treatment of natural geometry in finite volume river flow computations", Journal of Hydraulic Engineering 129, 5 (2003), pp. 385--393.</p><p>Liang, Qiuhua and Marche, Fabien, "Numerical resolution of well-balanced shallow water equations with complex source terms", Advances in water resources 32, 6 (2009), pp. 873--884.</p><p>Liang, Qiuhua, "Flood simulation using a well-balanced shallow flow model", Journal of hydraulic engineering 136, 9 (2010), pp. 669--675.</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 300-301 ◽  
pp. 814-820
Author(s):  
Tai Ru Li ◽  
Zhong Yan Bai ◽  
Xiao Chun Peng ◽  
Tao He

Based on finite proximate method (FPM) with 5 points scheme, two-dimensional shallow water equations are discretized. The mathematical model of 2-D flows is developed for modeling flood propagation in complicated river channel and flood detention area, and the hydrodynamic boundary is resolved through the introduction of the fictitious water depth concept. According to predicting the instantaneous and partial dam-break in a frictionless, horizontal channel, the comparison proved that this method can reflect the dynamic process of flow and can well capture the discontinuity of the shallow water wave equations. The flood propagation in complicated river channel and flood detention area is stimulated numerically to reveal the complicated flow characteristics of flood waves. It is seen that FPM is one of the effective methods to solve problem of flood propagation, having good shock capturing capability.


2016 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 198-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seshu Tirupathi ◽  
Tigran T. Tchrakian ◽  
Sergiy Zhuk ◽  
Sean McKenna

2009 ◽  
Vol 228 (19) ◽  
pp. 7452-7472 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Sivakumar ◽  
D.G. Hyams ◽  
L.K. Taylor ◽  
W.R. Briley

2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (12) ◽  
pp. 2842-2861
Author(s):  
Hadi Minbashian ◽  
Hojatollah Adibi ◽  
Mehdi Dehghan

PurposeThis paper aims to propose an adaptive method for the numerical solution of the shallow water equations (SWEs). The authors provide an arbitrary high-order method using high-order spline wavelets. Furthermore, they use a non-linear shock capturing (SC) diffusion which removes the necessity of post-processing.Design/methodology/approachThe authors use a space-time weak formulation of SWEs which exploits continuous Galerkin (cG) in space and discontinuous Galerkin (dG) in time allowing time stepping, also known as cGdG. Such formulations along with SC term have recently been proved to ensure the stability of fully discrete schemes without scarifying the accuracy. However, the resulting scheme is expensive in terms of number of degrees of freedom (DoFs). By using natural adaptivity of wavelet expansions, the authors devise an adaptive algorithm to reduce the number of DoFs.FindingsThe proposed algorithm uses DoFs in a dynamic way to capture the shocks in all time steps while keeping the representation of approximate solution sparse. The performance of the proposed scheme is shown through some numerical examples.Originality/valueAn incorporation of wavelets for adaptivity in space-time weak formulations applied for SWEs is proposed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 42 (8) ◽  
pp. 530-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Liu ◽  
Julio Angel Infante Sedano ◽  
Abdolmajid Mohammadian

This paper aims to develop a robust two-dimensional coupled numerical model based on an unstructured mesh, which can simulate rapidly varying flows over an erodible bed involving wet–dry fronts that is a complex yet practically important problem. Using a modified spatial reconstruction based on the finite volume method, the well-balanced property is preserved, which is important for accurate and efficient simulation of morphological problems. In the present study, the central-upwind scheme is extended to simulation of bed erosion and sediment transport for the first time. It is demonstrated that the proposed scheme shows good accuracy and high efficiency. A modified shallow water system is adopted to improve the model. The shallow water equations, sediment transport equation and bed evolution equation are coupled in the governing system. Multiple test cases are employed to demonstrate the robustness, accuracy, and efficiency of the current model. Furthermore, with a field scale dam-break test case, the efficiency and accuracy of the central-upwind method is verified in comparison with other popular Riemann solvers. The effects of the additional source terms in the adopted modified shallow water equations are also investigated by comparing the numerical results with a laboratory study available in the literature. The proposed scheme can efficiently track wetting and drying interfaces while preserving stability in simulating the bed erosion near the wet-dry fronts. The added terms in shallow water equations can improve the accuracy of the simulation when intense sediment-exchange exists; the central-upwind method adopted in the current study shows great accuracy and efficiency compared with other popular solvers; the developed model is robust, efficient and accurate to deal with various challenging cases.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document