4.6 Article

Isogeometric variational multiscale modeling of stably stratified flow over complex terrains

Journal

MATHEMATICAL MODELS & METHODS IN APPLIED SCIENCES
Volume 32, Issue 12, Pages 2371-2399

Publisher

WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD
DOI: 10.1142/S0218202522500555

Keywords

Isogeometric analysis; residual-based variational multiscale method; stratified flow; complex terrain

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2018-04329, RGPIN-2017003781]
  2. Advanced Research Computing (ARC) cluster at the University of Calgary
  3. Compute Canada
  4. Marine Environmental Observation, Prediction and Response (MEOPAR) network of Canada

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This article introduces a computational framework for numerical modeling of stratified boundary layer over complex terrain. The framework is validated against experiments and shows good agreement with the actual situation, and it is able to handle different degrees of stratified flow. The study also found that the weak imposition of Dirichlet boundary condition has an effect on the performance of the framework.
Numerical modeling of stratified boundary layer over complex terrain has been an ongoing challenge in the field of environmental fluid dynamics. In this work, we present a computational framework aiming to tackle that challenge. The key components of the framework are residual-based variational multiscale method, isogeometric analysis, and weak imposition of Dirichlet boundary condition. The framework is validated against a laboratory experiment on strongly stratified flow past a three-dimensional bell-shaped hill. Good agreement is observed for qualitative flow physics, with the predicted occurrences of flow separation, recirculation, and hydraulic jump closely matching those in the experiment. In addition, the dividing-streamline height and wavelength of lee wave computed from the present framework compare well to the theoretical predictions. We show that the present framework is able to tackle various degrees of stratifications. The effect of weak imposition of Dirichlet boundary condition on the performance of the framework is also examined. This paper is concluded with an outlook toward applying the present framework to modeling microscale stratified flow past real-world terrains by simulating stratified flow past a two-dimensional environmental terrain.

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