TY - JOUR
T1 - Two-phase cfd simulation of breaking waves impacting a coastal vertical wall with a recurved parapet
AU - Benoit, Michel
AU - Benguigui, William
AU - Teles, Maria
AU - Robaux, Fabien
AU - Peyrard, Christophe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by The International Society of Offshore and Polar Engineers.
PY - 2023/6/1
Y1 - 2023/6/1
N2 - Breaking wave impacts on seawalls are simulated using a multiphase three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software, neptune_cfd; the focus here is on a particular layout composed of a plane-sloping bottom and a vertical wall with a recurved parapet on top of it. The goal is to assess the capabilities and performances of the solver to predict the propagation of regular waves over the variable bathymetry (including shoaling and nonlinear effects), the depth-induced breaking process, and the interaction of these breaking waves with the seawall. We simulate two experiments involving similar geometries of the seabed and seawall, performed at two different scales (1:8 for case A and 1:1 for case B). After a description of the CFD solver and its numerical methods, the model is applied to the simulation of the two cases involving high-impact pressure peaks at some places on the wall surface. Numerical results are compared with experimental data regarding both free surface elevation and pressure on the wall. In general, a correct agreement between numerical predictions and experiments is obtained for free surface elevation, including the breaking zone. The time history of pressure variations for different positions along the wall during wave impacts is correctly reproduced. Although the measured maximum impact pressure peaks exhibit some variability among successive impacts, the order of magnitude of these maximum pressures is well predicted for case A. For case B, however, the maximum impact pressures are somewhat underestimated by the current simulations (requiring further tests and improvements), because the elevation of the wave impact on the wall happens to be a bit lower in the simulation.
AB - Breaking wave impacts on seawalls are simulated using a multiphase three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software, neptune_cfd; the focus here is on a particular layout composed of a plane-sloping bottom and a vertical wall with a recurved parapet on top of it. The goal is to assess the capabilities and performances of the solver to predict the propagation of regular waves over the variable bathymetry (including shoaling and nonlinear effects), the depth-induced breaking process, and the interaction of these breaking waves with the seawall. We simulate two experiments involving similar geometries of the seabed and seawall, performed at two different scales (1:8 for case A and 1:1 for case B). After a description of the CFD solver and its numerical methods, the model is applied to the simulation of the two cases involving high-impact pressure peaks at some places on the wall surface. Numerical results are compared with experimental data regarding both free surface elevation and pressure on the wall. In general, a correct agreement between numerical predictions and experiments is obtained for free surface elevation, including the breaking zone. The time history of pressure variations for different positions along the wall during wave impacts is correctly reproduced. Although the measured maximum impact pressure peaks exhibit some variability among successive impacts, the order of magnitude of these maximum pressures is well predicted for case A. For case B, however, the maximum impact pressures are somewhat underestimated by the current simulations (requiring further tests and improvements), because the elevation of the wave impact on the wall happens to be a bit lower in the simulation.
KW - Breaking waves
KW - CFD
KW - Coastal engineering
KW - Free-surface flow
KW - Wave impact
U2 - 10.17736/ijope.2023.sv03
DO - 10.17736/ijope.2023.sv03
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85172466695
SN - 1053-5381
VL - 33
SP - 123
EP - 131
JO - International Journal of Offshore and Polar Engineering
JF - International Journal of Offshore and Polar Engineering
IS - 2
ER -