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Individual violent wave-overtopping events: behaviour and estimation

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posted on 2019-01-21, 16:17 authored by Alison Raby, Ravindra Jayaratne, Henrik Bredmose, Geoff Bullock

To better understand individual violent wave overtopping, of significance for coastal defence design, three breaking wave types (steep-fronted, plunging and broken) based on focused wave groups, were generated in laboratory and numerical models. High-speed video captured overtopping events and produced velocity vector maps by means of bubble image velocimetry (BIV). Results were compared with a numerical model based on a linear wave detection procedure and a two-phase incompressible Navier–Stokes-based solver. This novel approach revealed that the overtopping waves comprised an initial jet of 0.2 s duration, but dominated by quasi-steady flow. Whilst laboratory surface-elevation time-histories were highly repeatable, overtopping volume repeats were sensitive to the breaker type. Measured volumes were compared with: the numerical model (which over-predicted, but was reasonably accurate for steep-fronted waves); estimations based on BIV results (which provided very close agreement for the steep-fronted waves); and a weir-based analogy (which provided reasonable agreement, but always under-predicted).

Funding

The OVI project (Fundamentals of Overtopping from individual Violent water wave Impacts) was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/D080754/1 and EP/D080533/1).

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