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Undular hydraulic jump formation and energy loss in a flow through emergent vegetation of varying thickness and density

Authors :
Ghufran Ahmed Pasha
Norio Tanaka
Source :
Ocean Engineering. 141:308-325
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

Floods resulting from extreme events like tsunamis may inundate widespread inland areas, but vegetation can act as a natural buffer zone to reduce the inundation area and dissipate the energy of flowing water. This paper summarizes a series of laboratory experiments in which the energy loss through emergent vegetation in a steady subcritical flow was investigated. The energy loss was determined against vegetation of variable thickness (dn, where d = diameter of cylinder, n = number of cylinders in a stream-wise direction per unit of cross-stream width), density (G/d, where G = spacing of each cylinder in cross-stream direction, d = diameter of cylinder), and initial Froude number. On the upstream side of vegetation, the backwater rise increased by increasing both vegetation thickness and density. Contrarily, on the downstream side a breaking undular jump with a lateral shock wave was observed for a dense vegetation arrangement (G/d = 0.25), whereas a non-breaking undular jump with and without air bubbles was identified for intermediate (G/d = 1.09) and sparse (G/d = 2.13) vegetation conditions, respectively. Under these conditions, the maximum energy reduction due to a jump reached 6.4% for dense vegetation, and was reduced to 1.7% and 1.4% for intermediate and sparse vegetations, respectively. Hence, denser vegetation offers larger resistance, thus causes significant energy loss.

Details

ISSN :
00298018
Volume :
141
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ocean Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........30320b2963e25f259508619b9bee4aa5