CECOAL   02625
CENTRO DE ECOLOGIA APLICADA DEL LITORAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Application of a roughness-length representation to parameterize AQ1 2 energy loss in 3-D numerical simulations of large rivers
Autor/es:
SANDBACH, S.; LANE, S.; HARDY, R,; AMSLER, M.; ASHWORTH, P.; BEST, J.; NICHOLAS, A.; ORFEO, O.; PARSONS, D.; REESINK, A.; SZUPIANY, R.
Revista:
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Editorial:
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
Referencias:
Año: 2012 vol. 48 p. 1 - 21
ISSN:
0043-1397
Resumen:
Recent technological advances in remote sensing have enabled investigation of the morphodynamics and hydrodynamics of large rivers. However, measuring topography and flow in these very large rivers is time consuming and thus often constrains the spatial resolution and reach-length scales that can be monitored. Similar constraints exist for computational fluid dynamics (CFD) studies of large rivers, requiring maximization of mesh- or grid-cell dimensions and implying a reduction in the representation of bedform-roughness elements that are of the order of a model grid cell or less, even if they are represented in available topographic data. These ‘‘subgrid’’ elements must be parameterized, and this paper applies and considers the impact of roughness-length treatments that include the effect of bed roughness due to ‘‘unmeasured’’ topography. CFD predictions were found to be sensitive to the roughness-length specification. Model optimization was based on acoustic Doppler current profiler measurements and estimates of the water surface slope for a variety of roughness lengths. This proved difficult as the metrics used to assess optimal model performance diverged due to the effects of large bedforms that are not well parameterized in roughness-length treatments. However, the general spatial flow patterns are effectively predicted by the model. Changes in roughness length were shown to have a major impact upon flow routing at the channel scale. The results also indicate an absence of secondary flow circulation cells in the reached studied, and suggest simpler two-dimensional models may have great utility in the investigation of flow within large rivers