Abstract
AbstractAn experimental study of turbulent wave–current boundary layer flows is performed using a state-of-the-art oscillating water tunnel (OWT) for flow generation and a particle image velocimetry system for velocity measurements. The current velocity profiles in the presence of sinusoidal waves indicate a two-log-profile structure suggested by the widely-used Grant–Madsen model. However, for weak currents in the presence of nonlinear waves, the two-log-profile structure is contaminated or even totally obliterated by the boundary layer streaming which is produced by the asymmetry of turbulence in successive half-periods of nonlinear waves. To interpret experimental results, a semi-analytical model which adopts a rigorous way to account for a time-varying turbulent eddy viscosity is developed. The model can accurately predict turbulence asymmetry streaming, which leads to successful predictions of the mean velocity embedded in nonlinear-wave tests and the current velocity profiles in the presence of either sinusoidal or nonlinear waves. Since the Longuet-Higgins-type streaming due to wave propagation is absent in OWT flows and not included in the semi-analytical model, future work is necessary to extend this study for applications in the coastal environment.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
47 articles.
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