Title: Part-I
1Part-I Comparative Study and Improvement in
Shallow Water Model
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
Assistant Professor, School of Basic
Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology
Mandi, Mandi-175001, H.P., India
- Collaborators Prof. Kim Dan Nguyen Dr. Yu-e
Shi
Speaker Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
Date 16. 09.
2014
2Outlines
- Governing Equations and projection method
- Wetting and drying treatment
- Numerical Validation
- Parabolic Bowl
- Application to Malpasset dam-break problem
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
3Introduction
- Free-surface water flows occur in many real life
flow - situations
- Many of these flows involve irregular flow
domains - with moving boundaries
- These types of flow behaviours can be modelled
mathematically by Shallow-Water Equations (SWE)
- The unstructured finite-volume methods (UFVMs)
not - only ensure local mass conservation but
also the best possible fitting of computing
meshes into the studied domain boundaries
- The present work extends the unstructured finite
volumes method for moving boundary problems
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
4Governing Equations and projection method
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
5Governing Equations and projection method
- Convection-diffusion step
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
6Governing Equations and projection method
- Equations (4)-(8) have been integrated by a
technique based on Greens theorem and then
discretised by an Unstructured Finite-Volume
Method (UFVM).
- The convection terms are handled by a 2nd order
Upwind Least Square Scheme (ULSS) along with the
Local Extremum Diminishing (LED) technique to
preserve the monotonicity of the scalar veriable
- The linear equation system issued from the wave
propagation step is implicitly solved by a
Successive Over Relaxation (SOR) technique.
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
7Steady wetting/drying fronts over adverse steep
slopes in real and discrete representations
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
8Modification of the bed slope in steady
wetting/drying fronts over adverse steep slopes
in real and discrete representations
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
9Wetting and drying treatment
- The main idea is to find out the partially drying
or flooding cells in each time step and then add
or subtract hypothetical fluid mass to fill the
cell or to make the cell totally dry
respectively, and then subtract or add the same
amount of fluid mass to the neighbouring wet
cells in the computational domain Brufau et. al.
(2002).
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
10Conservative Property
Proposition 1. The present numerical scheme
satisfies the C-property.
Proof. The details of the proof can be found in
Shi et at. 2013 (Comp Fluids).
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
11Numerical Validation
- To test the capacity of the present model in
describing the wetting and drying transition
- The analytical solution is given within the range
as
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
12Numerical Validation
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
13Numerical Validation
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
14Numerical Validation
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
15Numerical Validation
Mesh size Rate Rate Rate
13X13 0.006361 0.002829 0.003004
1.478 1.377 1.410
25X25 0.003004 0.001530 0.001554
1.412 1.354 1.363
50X50 0.001506 0.000834 0.000837
1.409 1.407 1.425
100X100 0.000758 0.000421 0.000412
1.403 1.413 1.397
200X200 0.000385 0.000211 0.000211
Mesh size Rate Rate Rate
13X13 0.008975 0.001268 0.001328
1.143 1.378 1.384
25X25 0.006943 0.000685 0.000712
1.416 1.181 1.182
50X50 0.003458 0.000491 0.000509
1.410 1.346 1.365
100X100 0.001739 0.000271 0.000273
1.403 1.396 1.401
200X200 0.000884 0.000139 0.000139
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
16Numerical Validation
Average Rate of convergence Average Rate of convergence
Bunya et. al. (2009) 1.33 0.84
Ern et. al. (2008) 1.4 0.5
Present 1.4 1.4
- Relative error in global mass conservation is
less than 0.003
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
17Application to the Dam-Break of Malpasset
- It was explosively broken at 914 p.m. on
December 2, 1959 following an exceptionally heavy
rain
- The flood water level rose to a level as high as
20 m above the original bed level
- The generated flood wave swept across the
downstream part of Reyran valley modifying its
morphology and destroying civil works such as
bridges and a portion of the highway
- After this accident, a field survey was done by
the local police
- In addition, a physical model was built to study
the dam-break flow in 1964
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
18Application to the Dam-Break of Malpasset
- The propagation times of the flood wave are known
from the exact shutdown time of three electric
transformers
- The maximum water levels on both the left and
right banks are known from a police survey
- The maximum water level and wave arrival time at
9 gauges were measured from a physical model,
built by Laboratoire National dHydraulique (LNH)
of EDF in 1964
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
19Application to the Dam-Break of Malpasset
Water depth and velocity field at t 1000 s
Water depth at t 2400 s, wave front reaching sea
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
20Application to the Dam-Break of Malpasset
Table 5. Shutdown time of electric
transformers (in seconds).
Electric Transformers A A B B C C
Field data 100 1240 1420
Valiani et al (2002) 98 -2 1305 5 1401 -1
TELEMAC 111 11 1287 4 1436 1
Present model 85 -15 1230 -1 1396 -2
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
21Application to the Dam-Break of Malpasset
Profile of maximum water levels at surveyed
points located on the right bank
Arrival time of the wave front
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
22Application to the Dam-Break of Malpasset
maximum water levels at surveyed points located
on the left bank
Maximum water level
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
23Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
24Conclusions
- We extended the unstructured finite volume scheme
for the wetting and drying problems
- This extended method correctly conserve the total
mass and satisfy the C-property
- Present scheme very efficiently capture the
wetting-drying-wetting transitions of parabolic
bowl-problem and shows almost 1.4 order of
accuracy for both the wetting and drying stages
- Present scheme then applied to the Malpasset
dam-break case satisfactory agreements are
obtained through the comparisons with existing
exact data, experimental data and other numerical
studies
- The numerical experience shows that friction has
a strong influence on wave arrival times but
doesnt affect maximum water levels
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
25References
- Bermudez A., Vázquez M.E., 1994. Upwind Methods
for Hyperbolic Conservation Laws with Source
Terms. Comput. Fluids, 23, p. 10491071.
- Brufau P., Vázquez-Cendón M.E., García-Navarro,
P., 2002. A Numerical Model for the Flooding and
Drying of Irregular Domains. Int. J. Numer. Meth.
Fluids, 39, p. 247275.
- Ern A., Piperno S., Djadel K., 2008. A
well-balanced RungeKutta discontinuous Galerkin
method for the shallow-water equations with
flooding and drying. Int. J. Numer. Meth. Fluids,
58, p. 125.
- Hervouet J.M., 2007. Hydrodynamics of free
surface flows-Modelling with the finite element
method, John Willey sons, ISBN
978-0-470-03558-0, 341 p.
- Nguyen K.D., Shi Y., Wang S.S.Y., Nguyen T.H.,
2006. 2D Shallow-Water Model Using Unstructured
Finite-Volumes Methods. J. Hydr Engrg., ASCE,
132(3), p. 258269 .
- Shi Y., Ray R. K., Nguyen K.D., 2013. A
projection method-based model with the exact
C-property for shallow-water flows over dry and
irregular bottom using unstructured finite-volume
technique. Comput. Fluids, 76, p. 178195.
- Technical Report HE-43/97/016A, 1997. Electricité
de France, Département Laboratoire National
dHydraulique, groupe Hydraulique Fluviale.
- Valiani A., Caleffi V., Zanni A., 2002. Case
study Malpasset dam-break simulation using a
two-dimensional finite volume method. J. Hydraul.
Eng., 128(5), 460472.
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014
26Part-II Two-Phase modelling of sediment
transport in the Gironde Estuary (France)
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
Assistant Professor, School of Basic
Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology
Mandi, Mandi-175001, H.P., India
- Collaborators Prof. K. D. Nguyen, Dr. D. Pham
Van Bang Dr. F. Levy
Speaker Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
Date 16. 09.
2014
27- Physical oceanography of the Gironde estuary
- Confluence of the GARONNE and DORDOGNE 70km to
the mouth - Width 2km - 14km
- Average depth 7-10m
- 2 main channels NAVIGATION SAINTONGE
- Partially mixed and macro-tidal estuary
- Amplitude 1,5-5m
- Averaged river discharge (1961-1970) 760 m3/s
- Solid discharge (1959-1965) 2,17 million
tons/year
28Body fitted mesh for Dordogne river
29Body fitted mesh for Garonne river
30Body fitted mesh for Gironde Estuiry
31PALM coupling for Gironde Estuary
32Results and Discussions
33Results and Discussions
34Thank you
Dr. Rajendra K. Ray
16.09.2014