Author:
MILLER MATTHEW,NENNSTIEL TOBIAS,DUNCAN JAMES H.,DIMAS ATHANASSIOS A.,PRÖSTLER STEPHAN
Abstract
The effect of free-surface drift layers on the maximum height that
a steady wave can
attain without breaking is explored through experiments and numerical simulations.
In the experiments, the waves are generated by towing a two-dimensional
fully
submerged hydrofoil at constant depth, speed and angle of attack. The drift
layer is
generated by towing a plastic sheet on the water surface ahead of the hydrofoil.
It
is found that the presence of this drift layer (free-surface wake) dramatically
reduces
the maximum non-breaking wave height and that this wave height correlates
well
with the surface drift velocity. In the simulations, the inviscid two-dimensional
fully
nonlinear Euler equations are solved numerically. Initially symmetric wave
profiles are
superimposed on a parallel drift layer whose mean flow characteristics
match those
in the experiments. It is found that for large enough initial wave amplitudes
a bulge
forms at the crest on the forward face of the wave and the vorticity fluctuations
just
under the surface in this region grow dramatically in time. This behaviour
is taken as
a criterion to indicate impending wave breaking. The maximum non-breaking
wave
elevations obtained in this way are in good agreement with the experimental
findings.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
12 articles.
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