1 research outputs found
Modeling the turbulent oscillatory flow over two-dimensional vortex ripples
The oscillatory turbulent flow over fixed two dimensional ripples is numerically solved
by using an appropriate turbulence closure. The aim of the contribution is that of detecting
features of the flow field which influence the ripple shape and the sediment transport.
The flow depends on three dimensionless parameters: the Reynolds number (Re), the
ripple steepness (h/L) and the ratio between the amplitude of fluid excursion close to
the sea bed and ripple wavelength (a/L). The results suggest that for increasing values
of a/L, the vortex shed on one side of the ripple crest is no longer the mirror image of
the vortex shed on the other side of the ripple during the following half oscillation cycle.
This suggests, for ripples forming in an erodible bottom, an uneven degree of sediment
entertainment from the two sides of the ripple crest. Moreover, steady recirculating cells
form. The number of cells which form per ripple length can be either one or two, depending
on the values of the parameters. The presence of steady recirculating cells is expected
to influence the equilibrium shape of the ripples. The evaluation of the plane and time
averaged velocity component shows the formation of a horizontal steady streaming, which
is directed either onshore or offshore. Such steady streaming is bound to influence the
cross-shore sediment transport