The unsteady overtopping of barriers by gravity currents and dam-break flows
Edward W.G. Skevington, Andrew J. Hogg

TL;DR
This paper models the unsteady overtopping of barriers by gravity currents and dam-break flows, analyzing different overtopping modes, trapped fluid volumes, and validating predictions with experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a boundary condition capturing multiple overtopping modes in a shallow water model and analyzes unsteady dynamics and fluid trapping in barrier interactions.
Findings
Up to 30% of fluid escapes in gravity currents with equal confined volume.
Over 60% of fluid escapes in subaerial dam-break flows with equal confined volume.
Model predictions agree well with experimental data.
Abstract
The collision of a gravitationally-driven horizontal current with a barrier following release from a confining lock is investigated using a shallow water model of the motion, together with a sophisticated boundary condition capturing the local interaction. The boundary condition permits several overtopping modes: supercritical, subcritical, and blocked flow. The model is analysed both mathematically and numerically to reveal aspects of the unsteady motion and to compute the proportion of the fluid trapped upstream of the barrier. Several problems are treated. Firstly, the idealised problem of a uniform incident current is analysed to classify the unsteady dynamical regimes. Then, the extreme regimes of a very close or distant barrier are tackled, showing the progression of the interaction through the overtopping modes. Next, the trapped volume of fluid at late times is investigated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Computational Fluid Dynamics and Aerodynamics · Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
