Modeling of drag coefficient under emergent and submerged flexible vegetated flow

Author:

Hussain Awesar A.12ORCID,Al-Obaidi Mudhar A.34ORCID,Rashid Farhan Lafta5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Informatics, University of Bradford 1 , Bradford BD7 1DP, United Kingdom

2. Department of Engineering and Construction, Faculty of Engineering and Construction, Bradford College 2 , Bradford BD7 1QX, United Kingdom

3. Technical Institute of Baquba, Middle Technical University 3 , Baghdad 10074, Iraq

4. Technical Instructor Training Institute, Middle Technical University 4 , Baghdad 10074, Iraq

5. Petroleum Engineering Department, College of Engineering, University of Kerbala 5 , Karbala 56001, Iraq

Abstract

In an open-channel flow, vegetation study is crucial to be investigated with any type of plants including trees, shrubs, and grasses, which are growing within or near the channel banks and beds in natural or artificial waterways, such as rivers, streams, and canals. These plants are different in height, size, shape, and arrangements, which have a big impact on the turbulence and flow resistance structures. In this paper, a regression analysis has been used based on collected experimental data to improve a specific equation for the drag coefficient for rigid vegetation stems and expanded to flexible stem types under emergent and submerged flow conditions. The equation suggests a length scale metric that, by analogy with the log wake law, normalizes velocity profiles of the depth-limited open channel flow with submerged, rigid vegetation. It has been formulated by drawing regression analysis for each parameter including (Re) Reynolds number, (h*) submergence ratio, and (λ) vegetation density by considering the (Fr) Froude number ranges for the water flows and vegetated channel flows. Using the Reynolds number, which is determined by the height and diameter of the vegetation, the results demonstrate an increase and decrease in the drag coefficient. For assessing the impact of vegetation on flow resistance at the surface layer, the notion of the drag coefficient is introduced. It shows better performance than other length scales in collapsing resistance data gathered under a variety of vegetation circumstances. The proposed scaling is more accurate than those based on the logarithmic, velocity-defect, and power laws in collapsing regression analysis for the studied parameters.

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Condensed Matter Physics,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Mechanics of Materials,Computational Mechanics,Mechanical Engineering

Reference42 articles.

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