Title: Sungwon Shin
1Doctoral Preliminary Exam
- Sungwon Shin
- June 8th, 2004
2Education Experience
- BS Hanyang Univ., Korea, 1993. Oceanography
(graduate cum laude) - MS Hanyang Univ., Korea, 1995. Physical
Oceanography (Underwater Acoustics) - Navy officer, full time lecturer, department
head of Oceanography at Korean Naval Academy,
Korea, 1995-98 - Ph.D. Texas AM Univ., 2000-02. Civil
Engineering (Coastal Ocean Engr.) - Ph.D. Oregon State Univ., 2002-present. Civil
Engineering (Coastal Ocean Engr.)
3Course Work
4Research Progress
- Surf zone void fraction turbulence (2001-02)
- Estimates of surf zone turbulence (2003)
- Pile-supported breakwater project (2003)
- Swash zone hydrodynamics (dissertation) (2003-05)
5Research Time Line
- 01/2000 Start of Ph.D. program TAMU
- 11/2000 Doctoral qualifying exam (written
oral) - 02/2001 Surf zone void fraction turbulence
- 12/2001 Surf zone void fraction turbulence
paper submitted - 01/2002 Data analysis of swash zone hydrodynamics
- 08/2002 Transfer to OSU
- 05/2003 Doctoral program meeting
- 07/2003 Estimates of surf zone turbulence
- 09/2003 Pile-supported breakwater project
- 02/2004 Pile-supported breakwater papers
submitted (2) - 03/2004 Numerical modeling of swash zone
- 03/2005 Expected date of graduation
61. Surf Zone Void Fraction Turbulence Brown
bag seminar (03/2004)
- Objective
- Understand air entrainment and turbulence by wave
breaking in the surf zone - Measurements
- u (LDV), ? (wave gage), air bubbles (VFM)
- First simultaneous meas.above trough level
- Analysis
- su2, no. of drop-outs by bubbles, void fraction
Experimental setup (TAMU, 2001)
71. Surf Zone Void Fraction Turbulence Brown
bag seminar (03/2004)
- Conclusions
- Horizontal turbulent intensity increases rapidly
above TL - Peak ensemble-averaged void fraction ranges from
15 to 20. - Turbulent intensity void fraction higher for
spilling breakers than for plunging above TL - Possible future work
- Transition region
- Large-scale
- Measure bubble velocity
- Publication
- Cox, D.T., and Shin, S. (2003). "Laboratory
Measurements of Void Fraction and Turbulence in
the Bore Region of Surf Zone Waves.'' J.
Engineering Mechanics, 129(10), p 1197-1205.
82. Estimates of Surf Zone Turbulence C. Scott,
D. Cox, S. Shin, and N. Clayton
- Objectives
- Compare four methods to separate turbulent and
wave-induced motions - Quantify scaling effects between small- and
large-scale laboratory experiments on wave
breaking turbulence - Compare average turbulence levels for regular and
irregular waves
- Contribution
- Experimental setup and data collection
- ICCE 04 Abstract (accepted)
- Scott, C.P., Cox, D.T., Shin, S., and Clayton, N.
(2004). Estimates of Surf Zone Turbulence in a
Large-Scale Laboratory Flume. Submitted to Proc.
29th Int. Conf. on Coast. Engrg.
93. Pile-Supported Breakwater Project PI K.D.
Suh. Seoul National Univ.
- Objectives
- Test effectiveness of pile-supported breakwater
- Validate numerical model with experimental results
- Publications
- Suh, K.D., Shin, S., and Cox, D.T. "Hydrodynamic
Characteristics of Pile-Supported Vertical Wall
Breakwaters. 1. Regular Waves." JWPCOE,
(Submitted 02/04). - Suh, K.D., Shin, S., and Cox, D.T. "Hydrodynamic
Characteristics of Pile-Supported Vertical Wall
Breakwaters. 2. Irregular Waves." JWPCOE,
(Submitted 02/04).
103. Pile-Supported Breakwater Project PI K.D.
Suh. Seoul National Univ.
- Measurements (Shin)
- Regular and random wave cases
- Incident, reflected and transmitted waves
- Wave runup on the structure
- Force on the structure
- Velocity behind the piles
- Numerical simulation
- Eigenfunction expansion method (Suh)
- Model run and comparison (Shin)
114. Swash Zone Hydrodynamics Dissertation Topic
- Objectives
- Obtain complete data set of swash zone
measurements - Extract turbulent quantities
- Validate numerical models in swash zone
-
- Experiment
- A. Sukumaran (2000, TAMU)
-
- Turbulence analysis
- Transport Eq. for TKE
- Bottom stress using law of wall
- Model comparisons
12Details of Swash Zone Hydrodynamics
13Research Objective
- What is the relative importance of wave breaking
turbulence and bottom boundary layer turbulence?
Region IV Swash Zone
Region I Wave Shoaling
Region III Inner Surf Zone
Region II Wave Breaking
High turbulence above trough Weaker
interaction with bottom
Wave height envelope
?
Strong turbulence by wave breaking invades
boundary layer Air entrainment
14Phase dependence
t/T p
t/T p/2
Maximum runup
Bore-generated turbulence dominant
t/T 3p/2
t/T 2p
Interaction of rundown with next wave
BBL-generated turbulence dominant
15Swash Hydrodynamics Literature Review
16(40 references and still adding)
17Swash Hydrodynamics Literature Review
- Field measurements
- Holland et al (2001) PIV, Horizontal velocity
fields - Puleo et al (2000) SSC is high in uprush and low
in downrush - Raubeheimer et al (2002) Infragravity wave
contributes to velocity variance and
asymmetry (observation and prediction) - Lab. Experiments
- Cowen, Sou, Liu, et al (2003) PIV (very small
scale, no bubbles) - Petti and Longo (2001) LDV, u-component only
- Bore-generated turbulence is dominant in uprush
- Bottom stress-generated turbulence is dominant
in downrush
18Swash Hydrodynamics Literature Review
- Numerical modeling
- Kobayashi and Poff (1994) RBREAK2 (NLSWE Lab
and field) - Wei, Kirby et al (1995) FUNWAVE (Boussinesq
Surf zone) - Lin and Liu (1998) and Bradford (2000) RANS
model (Surf zone) - Christensen (1990, 2001) LES model (Surf zone)
Emerat and Christensen (2000), Proc. ICCE
19Swash Zone Hydrodynamics Approach
- Laboratory data analysis
- Analyze 2-D velocity measurement from BBL to
crest - Separate turbulent velocity from organized motion
- Calculate TKE, Reynolds stress, friction
velocity, and friction factor - Estimate energy dissipation due to wave breaking
and friction - Numerical modeling
- RBREAK2, FUNWAVE, COBRAS, YNU (LES)
- Compare hydrodynamic quantities from data with
numerical results - Quantify each models performance in the swash
zone
20Experimental Setup A. Sukumaran (TAMU M.Sc.,
2000)
- Regular Wave Case (T 2s), Plunging Breaker
- D50 2.0 mm (Fixed)
- Composite slope 135 110
- Glass-walled wave flume 35 m long, 0.90 m wide,
1.2 m high
21Data Analysis
- Procedure
- Data acquisition
- Separate from u (ensemble average)
- Data analysis
- TKE from wave breaking
- Bottom friction in boundary layer
Turbulence intensity
Shear velocity
22Wave Breaking TKE(Approximate local equilibrium)
- Transport equation of turbulent kinetic energy
(ASCE,1988)
23Wave Breaking TKE(Approximate local equilibrium)
- Dimensionless variables (Cox et al, 1994)
(s ratio between the horizontal and vertical
length scale)
Local equilibrium
Local equilibrium
24Calibration of Cd Cl
into
Substitute
Estimate Cl
(By least square method using
)
25Estimation DB
DB Energy dissipation due to wave breaking
Cox et al, 1994
26TKE in the Surf Zone
Dissipation
Production
Cox et al., ICCE 1994
27TKE in the Swash
Old
New
Dissipation
Production
k (su2sw2) / 2
suw
Almost nothing reported in literature
Using Cl
Du / Dz
28Boundary Layer Processes(Bottom Friction)
- Logarithmic velocity for a rough bottom (Yaglom,
1979)
- Bottom Stress (Cox et al, 1996)
(Grant and Madsen, 1979)
- Energy dissipation due to bottom friction
29Bottom Shear Stress
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32Experimental Analysis Summary
- Whats been done?
- Separate u, w and compute TKE, su2, and suw
- Estimate bottom friction factor and its energy
dissipation - Whats left to do?
- Estimate Cl Cd
- Estimate dissipation due to wave breaking
33Numerical Comparison
- Motivation
- Varying degrees of wave model complexity
- Most numerical models are focused on surf zone
- Very few models validated in swash zone
- Energy dissipation is uncertain
- Skewness/Asymmetry
- Bottom boundary layer dynamics
- Sediment transport in swash will depend on these
details.
34Numerical models for comparison
35Model Output and Data Availability
36RBREAK2
- Kobayasi Poff, 1994
- Nonlinear shallow water equation (NLSWE)
- 1-D depth averaged time domain model
- Hrms, ?, and setup were compared with the swash
data from SUPERTANK Lab. Data Collection Project
(1992) - Estimates energy dissipation due to wave breaking
and bottom friction
37RBREAK2 vs Swash Data
? Exp. Data x RBREAK2
38RBREAK2 Preliminary Results
? Exp. Data - RBREAK2
39FUNWAVE
- Kirby, Wei, Chen, et al (1998)
- Fully nonlinear Boussinesq equation
- Eddy viscosity type wave breaking (through the
momentum correction surface roller model) - Bottom friction by quadratic law (law of the wall)
Run of Demo Case
40COBRAS
- Lin Liu (1998)
- Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes equation
- k-e model for turbulence
- VOF method (Hirt Nichols, 1981) for free surface
Lin and Liu (1998), J. Fluid Mechanics
41COBRAS Preliminary Result
? COBRAS x Exp. data
42COBRAS Preliminary Result
- COBRAS x Exp. data
43YNU (LES)
- Okayasu (Yokohama National Univ.)
- Large eddy simulation
- Subgrid scale model (SGS model) for smaller scale
turbulence - Density function method for free surface
Example of LES from Christensen (2001), Coastal
Engrg.
44YNU (LES) Preliminary Results
Three waves takes approximately 6 hrs on 2 GHz PC.
45Numerical Comparison Summary
- Whats been done?
- Preliminary runs for all models
- Calculated dissipation due to bottom friction
(RBREAK2) - Calculated free surface and instantaneous
velocity (YNU) - Whats left to do?
- Run models for experimental conditions
- Quantify each models performance in the swash
zone
46Dissemination of Results
- Journal Paper 1
- Data analysis and comparison of wave breaking and
bottom friction - To be submitted to J.Marine Geology. (Special
issue on swash dynamics J. Puleo, Ed.) -
- Journal Paper 2
- Comparison of numerical models
- To be submitted to Coastal Engineering
-
- Conference Presentation
- AGU Fall meeting SF, 2004
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