Investigation of Improved Energy Dissipation in Stepped Spillways Applying Bubble Image Velocimetry

Author:

Mikalsen Lars Marius1,Thorsen Kasper Haugaard2ORCID,Bor Aslı34,Lia Leif3

Affiliation:

1. Dr.techn. Olav Olsen AS, Vollsveien 17A, 1366 Lysaker, Norway

2. Multiconsult Norge AS, Nedre Skøyen vei 2, 0276 Oslo, Norway

3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), S.P. Andersens veg 5, 7491 Trondheim, Norway

4. Department of Civil Engineering, Izmir University of Economics, 35330 İzmir, Turkey

Abstract

This study investigates skimming flow regimes, two-phase air–water flow conditions, and simple measures to improve energy dissipation in stepped spillways. Experiments were conducted using two different scale physical models, 1:50 and 1:17, within separate rectangular flumes to define scale effects. Flow patterns were analyzed using the Bubble Image Velocimetry (BIV) technique, which tracks air bubbles. The introduction of splitters resulted in a 7% increase in relative energy dissipation. Additionally, the length of inception was reduced to Li/ks = 10, thereby decreasing the potential for subsequent cavitation. Beyond the BIV experiments, two experiments were conducted on the large-scale model using Acoustic Doppler Velocimetry (ADV), with and without splitters, to examine the impact of splitters on the velocity profile above the crest. In the experiment with splitters, the vertical velocity vector (v) contributed to turbulence by changing direction, thereby reducing average velocities both in front of and behind the ogee crest. This led to a reduction in energy on the downstream side of the spillway. Although the small-scale model appears unsuitable for studying two-phase flow, the change in relative energy dissipation from the baseline to the splitter configuration was practically identical for both scale models, thereby supporting the findings of the large-scale model.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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