scholarly journals Optimized Vegetation Density to Dissipate Energy of Flood Flow in Open Canals

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Mahdi Feizbahr ◽  
Navid Tonekaboni ◽  
Guang-Jun Jiang ◽  
Hong-Xia Chen

Vegetation along the river increases the roughness and reduces the average flow velocity, reduces flow energy, and changes the flow velocity profile in the cross section of the river. Many canals and rivers in nature are covered with vegetation during the floods. Canal’s roughness is strongly affected by plants and therefore it has a great effect on flow resistance during flood. Roughness resistance against the flow due to the plants depends on the flow conditions and plant, so the model should simulate the current velocity by considering the effects of velocity, depth of flow, and type of vegetation along the canal. Total of 48 models have been simulated to investigate the effect of roughness in the canal. The results indicated that, by enhancing the velocity, the effect of vegetation in decreasing the bed velocity is negligible, while when the current has lower speed, the effect of vegetation on decreasing the bed velocity is obviously considerable.

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 144-151
Author(s):  
Fedir Matiko ◽  
◽  
Vitalii Roman ◽  
Halyna Matiko ◽  
Dmytro Yalinskyi

Results of investigating the additional error of ultrasonic flowmeters caused by the distortion of the flow are presented in the article. The location coordinates of acoustic paths were calculated for their number from 1 to 6 according to the different numerical integrating methods: Gauss (Gauss-Legendre, Gauss-Jacobi), Chebyshev (equidistant location of acoustic paths), Westinghouse method, method of OWICS (Optimal Weighted Integration for Circular Sections). This made it possible to realize the flowrate equation for multi-path ultrasonic flowmeters and to determine their additional error for different location of the acoustic paths. The average flow velocity along each path is calculated based on the flow velocity profile in the pipe cross section. Four two-peak Salami functions of velocity are used to calculate the velocity profile of the distorted flow caused by typical local resistances. According to the research results the recommendations were developed for choosing the number of the acoustic paths of the ultrasonic flowmeters and for using the methods for determining the location coordinates of the acoustic paths.


Author(s):  
С.А. Исаев ◽  
А.Б Мазо ◽  
Д.В. Никущенко ◽  
И.А. Попов ◽  
А.Г. Судаков

The slope of the oval-trench dimple in the corridor package on the hydrodynamic stabilized section of the narrow channel has a dramatic effect on the anomalous intensification of returned and swirling flows in the dimple, leading to a 3–4-fold decrease in relative negative friction in the range of angles from 40° to 60°, an increase in the highest speed return and secondary flows up to 0.8 and 1.18 with respect to the mass-average flow velocity in the channel.


2013 ◽  
Vol 07 (05) ◽  
pp. 1250029 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. NOARAYANAN ◽  
K. MURALI ◽  
V. SUNDAR

Vegetation along a coastline could offer significant protection of the adjoining land area against natural hazards such as storm surge and tsunami. In this context, the flexibility of the individual that stems within the green belt is understood to play an important role in the attenuation of momentum of the incoming waves. The physics of which, is yet to be understood completely. Difficulty in modeling the rigidity of the plantations, both numerically and experimentally, is the main cause for this lack of understanding. In the present work, a detailed laboratory study is taken up to examine the resistance characteristics of a group of model slender flexible cylinders. The individual cylinders of the group were fixed to the bed in a staggered configuration. The size, vegetation density and the elastic modulus of the individual stems were chosen such that the tests covered the practical ranges of vegetation in coastal forestry. The Manning's n for different flow conditions as well as for vegetative parameters was obtained from the physical tests in uniform steady current. The results clearly bring out the variation of flow resistance in terms of flow velocity, density of plantation, individual stem diameter and its elastic property. A new empirical relationship is proposed for estimation of Manning's n for staggered flexible emerging plantations which is valid for depths of flow greater than 0.8 times the undeflected plant height.


2019 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Khairul Amri ◽  
Suprijanto Suprijanto ◽  
Deddy Kurniadi ◽  
Endang Juliastuti

A conventional transit time ultrasonic flowmeter (USM) has a high accuracy for symmetric flow profiles but inaccurate for asymmetric flow profiles. Flow profile shapes can also change over time and difficult to predict. USM with tomographic configuration (USM-Tomo) can adapt to the flow profile changes but result in low temporal resolution. Meanwhile, USM with an adaptive weighting method can measure asymmetric flow velocity but limited to specific asymmetric flow profiles. An alternative scheme to determine adaptive weighting in various asymmetric flow profiles, we proposed a hybrid USM-Tomo. This scheme proposes programmable acoustic path configuration that could set the path mode between USM and tomography. Reducing computation of time of flight in each acoustic can be done by applying the dual-transducers technique. An adaptive weighting of hybrid USM-Tomo is calculated based on the mapping function between the set of velocity on 6 parallel paths of USM and average flow velocity from USM-Tomo. The mapping function is determined using machine learning, i.e., Artificial Neural Network (ANN) and Support Vector Regression (SVR). In the measurement phase, the average flow velocity is determined using the mapping function with input 6 parallel acoustic paths.  Based on various types of asymmetric flow profiles used in the experiment, the 6 parallel acoustic paths of USM could produce average flow velocity with error below 1% compared to USM-Tomo. Therefore, the proposed hybrid USM-Tomo scheme has potential to be an alternative scheme for flow meter in industrial application.


2012 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 163-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mojca Vilfan ◽  
Gašper Kokot ◽  
Andrej Vilfan ◽  
Natan Osterman ◽  
Blaž Kavčič ◽  
...  

Biological cilia are found on surfaces of some microorganisms and on surfaces of many eukaryotic cells where they interact with the surrounding fluid. The periodic beating of the cilia is asymmetric, resulting in directed swimming of unicellular organisms or in generation of a fluid flow above a ciliated surface in multicellular ones. Following the biological example, externally driven artificial cilia have recently been successfully implemented as micropumps and mixers. However, biomimetic systems are useful not only in microfluidic applications, but can also serve as model systems for the study of fundamental hydrodynamic phenomena in biological samples. To gain insight into the basic principles governing propulsion and fluid pumping on a micron level, we investigated hydrodynamics around one beating artificial cilium. The cilium was composed of superparamagnetic particles and driven along a tilted cone by a varying external magnetic field. Nonmagnetic tracer particles were used for monitoring the fluid flow generated by the cilium. The average flow velocity in the pumping direction was obtained as a function of different parameters, such as the rotation frequency, the asymmetry of the beat pattern, and the cilium length. We also calculated the velocity field around the beating cilium by using the analytical far-field expansion. The measured average flow velocity and the theoretical prediction show an excellent agreement.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (21) ◽  
pp. 4786 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Kang ◽  
Andrew Feeney ◽  
Riliang Su ◽  
David Lines ◽  
Sivaram Nishal Ramadas ◽  
...  

Accurate average flow velocity determination is essential for flow measurement in many industries, including automotive, chemical, and oil and gas. The ultrasonic transit-time method is common for average flow velocity measurement, but current limitations restrict measurement accuracy, including fluid dynamic effects from unavoidable phenomena such as turbulence, swirls or vortices, and systematic flow meter errors in calibration or configuration. A new spatial averaging method is proposed, based on flexural ultrasonic array transducer technology, to improve measurement accuracy and reduce the uncertainty of the measurement results. A novel two-dimensional flexural ultrasonic array transducer is developed to validate this measurement method, comprising eight individual elements, each forming distinct paths to a single ultrasonic transducer. These paths are distributed in two chordal planes, symmetric and adjacent to a diametral plane. It is demonstrated that the root-mean-square deviation of the average flow velocity, computed using the spatial averaging method with the array transducer is 2.94%, which is lower compared to that of the individual paths ranging from 3.65% to 8.87% with an average of 6.90%. This is advantageous for improving the accuracy and reducing the uncertainty of classical single-path ultrasonic flow meters, and also for conventional multi-path ultrasonic flow meters through the measurement via each flow plane with reduced uncertainty. This research will drive new developments in ultrasonic flow measurement in a wide range of industrial applications.


2002 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. 385-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masamu Aniya ◽  
Renji Naruse ◽  
Satoru Yamaguchi

AbstractUsing vertical aerial photographs taken manually with a 6 × 6 cm format camera in 1984, 1986 and 1999, the surface morphology of the ablation area of Glaciar Soler, Hielo Patagónico Norte (northern Patagonia icefield), Chile, was studied. Glaciar Soler has an area of 50.9 km2; the ablation area below the icefall is about 7 km long and 2 km wide. An uncontrolled aerial-photographic mosaic for the area below the icefall was assembled from 40–60 aerial photographs, on which the surface morphology was mapped from interpretation of stereo pairs of the enlarged photographs (scales of 1:4500 to 1: 8000). Themapped features include debris-free and debris-covered ices, ogive bands and waves, crevasses, supraglacial streams, moulins, medial moraines, troughs and grooves. A total of 32–34 pairs of ogive bands were recognized, from which an average flow velocity of about 160 m a–1 was deduced. The spacing of a pair of light and dark ogive bands indicates that the flow velocity ranges from about 350 ma–1 near the icefall to some 100 ma–1 near the snout. Comparison of the field-measured data with the ogive spacing indicates that the seasonal variation in flow velocity of Glaciar Soler is very large, probably because of variation in the amount of basal sliding.


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