Runup of long waves on composite coastal slopes: numerical simulations and experiment

Author(s):  
Ira Didenkulova ◽  
Andrey Kurkin ◽  
Artem Rodin ◽  
Ahmed Abdalazeez ◽  
Denys Dutykh

<p>The goal of this study is to investigate the effect of the bottom shape on wave runup. The obtained results have been confronted with available analytical predictions and a dedicated numerical simulation campaign has been carried out by the team. We study long wave runup on composite coastal profiles. Two types of beach profiles are considered. The Coastal Slope 1 consists of two merged plane beaches with lengths 1.2 m and 5 m and beach slopes tan α = 1:10 and tan β = 1:15 respectively. The Coastal Slope 2 also consists of two sections: plane beach with length 1.2 m and a beach slope α, which is merged with a convex (non-reflecting) beach. The latter is constructed in the way, that its total height and length remain the same as for the Coastal Slope 1.</p><p>The study is conducted with numerical (in silico) and experimental approaches.</p><p>Experiments have been conducted in the hydrodynamic flume of the Nizhny Novgorod State Technical University n.a. R.E. Alekseev. Both composite beach profiles were constructed in 2019. The Coastal Slope 1 consists of three parts made of aluminum. The plain beach part of the Coastal Slope 2 is also made of aluminum, and the convex profile consists of two parts made of curved PLEXIGLAS organic glass. The water surface oscillations are measured using capacitive and resistive wave gauges with recording frequencies of up to 80 Hz and 100 Hz respectively. Wave runup is measured by a capacitive string sensor installed along the slope.</p><p>A series of experiments on the generation and runup of regular wave trains with a period of 1s, 2s, 3s and 4s were carried out. The water level was kept constant for all experiments and was equal to 0.3 meters. Up to now, 21 experiments have been carried out (10 and 11 experiments for each Coastal Slope respectively).</p><p>A comparative numerical study is carried out in the framework of the nonlinear shallow water theory and the dispersive theory in the Boussinesq approximation.</p><p>As a result, we compare the long wave dynamics on these two bottom profiles and discuss the influence of nonlinearity and dispersion on the characteristics of wave runup. It is shown numerically that, in the framework of the nonlinear shallow water theory, the runup height on the Coastal Slope 2 tends to exceed the corresponding runup height on the Coastal Slope 1, that also agrees with our previous results (Didenkulova et al. 2009; Didenkulova et al. 2018). Taking dispersion into account leads to an increase in the spread in values of the wave runup height. As a consequence, individual cases when the runup height on the Coastal Slope 1 is higher than on the Coastal Slope 2 have been observed. In experimental data, such cases occur more often, so that the advantage of one slope over another is no longer obvious. Note also that the most nonlinear breaking waves with a period of 1s have a greater runup height on Coastal Slope 2 for both models and most experimental data.</p>

1984 ◽  
Vol 1 (19) ◽  
pp. 23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshinobu Ogawa ◽  
Nobuo Shuto

Run-up of periodic waves on gentle or non-uniform slopes is discussed. Breaking condition and run-up height of non-breaking waves are derived "by the use of the linear long wave theory in the Lagrangian description. As to the breaking waves, the width of swash zone and the run-up height are-obtained for relatively gentle slopes (less than 1/30), on dividing the transformation of waves into dissipation and swash processes. The formula obtained here agrees with experimental data better than Hunt's formula does. The same procedure is applied to non-uniform slopes and is found to give better results than Saville's composite slope method.


2008 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-502 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. H. Choi ◽  
E. Pelinovsky ◽  
D. C. Kim ◽  
I. Didenkulova ◽  
S.-B. Woo

Abstract. Solitary wave runup on a non-plane beach is studied analytically and numerically. For the theoretical approach, nonlinear shallow-water theory is applied to obtain the analytical solution for the simplified bottom geometry, such as an inclined channel whose cross-slope shape is parabolic. It generalizes Carrier-Greenspan approach for long wave runup on the inclined plane beach that is currently used now. For the numerical study, the Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) system is applied to study soliton runup on an inclined beach and the detailed characteristics of the wave processes (water displacement, velocity field, turbulent kinetic energy, energy dissipation) are analyzed. In this study, it is theoretically and numerically proved that the existence of a parabolic cross-slope channel on the plane beach causes runup intensification, which is often observed in post-tsunami field surveys.


1964 ◽  
Vol 1 (9) ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
Michael Amein

The integration of the equations of the nonlinear shallow-water theory by a finite difference scheme based on the method of characteristics is programmed for digital computers. In the program, the equations of the bore propagation are coupled to the equations of the nonlinear theory, and thus a procedure for predicting the motion of the entire wave, including the bore, is established. Waves of irregular shape and experimental data are treated by an iterative method. Laboratory experiments on the inception and propagation of bores also are presented.


2006 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 027104 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. El ◽  
R. H. J. Grimshaw ◽  
N. F. Smyth

2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 529-532
Author(s):  
I. I. Didenkulova ◽  
E. N. Pelinovsky

The nonlinear problem of long wave run-up on a plane beach in a presence of a tide is solved within the shallow water theory using the Carrier-Greenspan approach. The exact solution of the nonlinear problem for wave run-up height is found as a function of the incident wave amplitude. Influence of tide on characteristics of wave run-up on a beach is studied.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey Gurbatov ◽  
Efim Pelinovsky

Abstract. The run-up of random long wave ensemble (swell, storm surge and tsunami) on the constant-slope beach is studied in the framework of the nonlinear shallow-water theory in the approximation of non-breaking waves. If the incident wave approaches the shore from deepest water, runup characteristics can be found in two stages: at the first stage, linear equations are solved and the wave characteristics at the fixed (undisturbed) shoreline are found, and, at the second stage, the nonlinear dynamics of the moving shoreline is studied by means of the Riemann (nonlinear) transformation of linear solutions. In the paper, detail results are obtained for quasi-harmonic (narrow-band) waves with random amplitude and phase. It is shown that the probabilistic characteristics of the runup extremes can be found from the linear theory, while the same ones of the moving shoreline – from the nonlinear theory. The role of wave breaking due to large-amplitude outliers is discussed, so that it becomes necessary to consider wave ensembles with non-Gaussian statistics within the framework of the analytical theory of non-breaking waves. The basic formulas for calculating the probabilistic characteristics of the moving shoreline and its velocity through the incident wave characteristics are given. They can be used for estimates of the flooding zone characteristics in marine natural hazards.


Author(s):  
N. Popplewell ◽  
M. L. Lu ◽  
A. H. Shah

Shallow water theory is used to describe the sloshing and severe wave breaking action of water contained in a rigid nutation damper undergoing a coupled horizontal/rotational motion. Results from a simple numerical procedure are shown to agree with limited experimental data. They also demonstrate that a nutation damper’s rotation promotes a hydraulic jump that beneficially enhances damping.


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