Computation of Wave Impact Pressures and Kinematics During Plunging Breaking Wave Interaction With a Vertical Cylinder Using CFD Modelling

Author(s):  
Mayilvahanan Alagan Chella ◽  
Hans Bihs ◽  
Dag Myrhaug ◽  
Øivind Asgeir Arntsen

Wave loads from breaking waves on offshore wind turbine (OWT) substructures in shallow waters still remain uncertain. The interaction of breaking waves with structures is characterized by complex free surface deformations, instantaneous impact of the water mass against the structure and consequently large wave forces on the structures. The main objective of the paper is to investigate wave impact pressures and kinematics during the interaction of breaking waves with a vertical cylinder using the open-source CFD model REEF3D. The model is based on the Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations coupled with the level set method (LSM) and k-ω turbulence model. Three wave impact conditions are considered in the present study. The numerically simulated free surface deformations around the cylinder during the breaking wave interaction are also presented for different wave impact conditions. For three wave impact conditions, the wave impact pressure and the horizontal and vertical components of the particle velocity are computed in front of the cylinder and analyzed. The pressure and velocity profile at their maximum values are also examined and discussed. In addition, the total force is calculated for three breaking conditions and they are correlated with the pressure and kinematics during the interaction.

Author(s):  
Mayilvahanan Alagan Chella ◽  
Hans Bihs ◽  
Dag Myrhaug ◽  
Øivind Asgeir Arntsen

Wave loads from breaking waves on offshore wind turbine (OWT) substructures in shallow waters still remain uncertain. The interaction of breaking waves with structures is characterized by complex free surface deformations, instantaneous impact of the water mass against the structure, and consequently large wave forces on the structures. The main objective of the paper is to investigate wave impact pressures and kinematics during the interaction of breaking waves with a vertical cylinder using the open-source computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model REEF3D. The model is based on the Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) equations coupled with the level set method and k–ω turbulence model. Three wave impact conditions are considered in this study. The numerically simulated free surface deformations around the cylinder during the breaking wave interaction are also presented for different wave impact conditions. For three wave impact conditions, the wave impact pressure and the horizontal and vertical components of the particle velocity are computed in front of the cylinder and analyzed. The pressure and velocity profile at their maximum values are also examined and discussed. In addition, the total force is calculated for three breaking conditions and they are correlated with the pressure and kinematics during the interaction.


Author(s):  
Anne M. Fullerton ◽  
Thomas C. Fu ◽  
Edward S. Ammeen

Impact loads from waves on vessels and coastal structures are highly complex and may involve wave breaking, making these changes difficult to estimate numerically or empirically. Results from previous experiments have shown a wide range of forces and pressures measured from breaking and non-breaking waves, with no clear trend between wave characteristics and the localized forces and pressures that they generate. In 2008, a canonical breaking wave impact data set was obtained at the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division, by measuring the distribution of impact pressures of incident non-breaking and breaking waves on one face of a cube. The effects of wave height, wavelength, face orientation, face angle, and submergence depth were investigated. A limited number of runs were made at low forward speeds, ranging from about 0.5 to 2 knots (0.26 to 1.03 m/s). The measurement cube was outfitted with a removable instrumented plate measuring 1 ft2 (0.09 m2), and the wave heights tested ranged from 8–14 inches (20.3 to 35.6 cm). The instrumented plate had 9 slam panels of varying sizes made from polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and 11 pressure gages; this data was collected at 5 kHz to capture the dynamic response of the gages and panels and fully resolve the shapes of the impacts. A Kistler gage was used to measure the total force averaged over the cube face. A bottom mounted acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP) was used to obtain measurements of velocity through the water column to provide incoming velocity boundary conditions. A Light Detecting and Ranging (LiDAR) system was also used above the basin to obtain a surface mapping of the free surface over a distance of approximately 15 feet (4.6 m). Additional point measurements of the free surface were made using acoustic distance sensors. Standard and high-speed video cameras were used to capture a qualitative assessment of the impacts. Impact loads on the plate tend to increase with wave height, as well as with plate inclination toward incoming waves. Further trends of the pressures and forces with wave characteristics, cube orientation, draft and face angle are investigated and presented in this paper, and are also compared with previous test results.


Author(s):  
Erik Jan de Ridder ◽  
Pieter Aalberts ◽  
Joris van den Berg ◽  
Bas Buchner ◽  
Johan Peeringa

The effects of operational loads and wind loads on offshore monopile wind turbines are well understood. For most sites, however, the water depth is such that breaking or near-breaking waves will occur causing impulsive excitation of the monopile and consequently considerable stresses and displacements in the monopile, tower and turbine. To investigate this, pilot model tests were conducted with a special model of an offshore wind turbine with realistic flexibility tested in (extreme) waves. This flexibility was considered to be necessary for two reasons: the impulsive loading of extreme waves is very complex and there can be an interaction between this excitation and the dynamic response of the foundation and tower. The tests confirmed the importance of the topic of breaking waves: horizontal accelerations of more than 0.5g were recorded at nacelle level in extreme cases.


Author(s):  
Vipin Chakkurunni Palliyalil ◽  
Panneer Selvam Rajamanickam ◽  
Mayilvahanan Alagan Chella ◽  
Vijaya Kumar Govindasamy

The main objective of the paper is to investigate wave impact forces from breaking waves on a monopile substructure for offshore wind turbine in shallow waters. This study examines the load assessment parameters relevant for breaking wave forces on a vertical circular cylinder subjected to breaking waves. Experiments are conducted in a shallow water flume and the wave generation is based on piston type wave maker. The experiments are performed with a vertical circular cylinder with diameter, D = 0.20m which represents a monopile substructure for offshore wind turbines with regular waves of frequencies around 0.8Hz. The experimental setup consists of a 1/10 slope followed by a horizontal bed portion with a water depth of 0.8m. Plunging breaking waves are generated and free surface elevations are measured at different locations along the wave tank from wave paddle to the cylinder in order to find the breaking characteristics. Wave impact pressures are measured on the cylinder at eight different vertical positions along the height of the cylinder under breaking waves for different environmental conditions. The wave impact pressures and wave surface elevations in the vicinity of the cylinder during the impact for three different wave conditions are presented and discussed.


Author(s):  
Tim Bunnik ◽  
Joop Helder ◽  
Erik-Jan de Ridder

The effects of operational wave loads and wind loads on offshore mono pile wind turbines are well understood. For most sites, however, the water depth is such that breaking or near-breaking waves will occur causing impulsive excitation of the mono pile and consequently considerable stresses, displacements and accelerations in the mono pile, tower and turbine. Model tests with a flexible mono pile wind turbine were carried out to investigate the effect of breaking waves. In these model tests the flexibility of the turbine was realistically modelled. These model tests were used for validation of a numerical model for the flexible response of wind turbines due to breaking waves. A focusing wave group has been selected which breaks just aft of the wind turbine. The numerical model consists of a one-way coupling between a CFD model for breaking wave loads and a simplified structural model based on mode shapes. An iterative wave calibration technique has been developed in the CFD method to ensure a good match between the measured and simulated incoming wave profile. This makes a deterministic comparison between simulations and measurements possible. This iteration is carried out in a 2D CFD domain (long-crested wave restriction) and is therefore relatively cheap. The calibrated CFD wave is then simulated in a (shorter) 3D CFD domain including a (fixed) wind turbine. The resulting wave pressures on the turbine have been used to compute the modal excitation and subsequently the modal response of the wind turbine. The horizontal accelerations resulting from this one-way coupling are in good agreement with the measured accelerations.


Author(s):  
Johan M. Peeringa ◽  
Koen W. Hermans

In the WiFi-JIP project, the impact of steep (and breaking) waves on a monopile support structure was studied. Observations during model tests showed that large tower top accelerations occur due to a slamming wave. Using experiments and simulations results, a new formulation of the design load for a slamming wave was developed. Instead of the embedded stream function, as applied in industry, the wave train is generated with the nonlinear potential flow code Oceanwave3D. On the wave train a set of conditions is applied to find the individual waves, that are closest to the prescribed breaking wave and most likely cause a slamming impact. To study the effect of the new slamming load formulation on different sized offshore wind turbines, aero-hydroelastic simulations were performed on a classic 3MW wind turbine, a modern 4MW wind turbine and a future 10MW wind turbine. The simulations are performed with and without a slamming wave load. The slamming has a clear effect on the tower top acceleration. Accelerations due to the wave impact are highest for the 3MW model at the tower top and at 50m height. A serious tower top acceleration of almost 7m/s2 due to wave slamming is found for the 3MW turbine. This is an increase of 474% compared with the case of Morison wave loads only.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 55
Author(s):  
Darshana T. Dassanayake ◽  
Alessandro Antonini ◽  
Athanasios Pappas ◽  
Alison Raby ◽  
James Mark William Brownjohn ◽  
...  

The survivability analysis of offshore rock lighthouses requires several assumptions of the pressure distribution due to the breaking wave loading (Raby et al. (2019), Antonini et al. (2019). Due to the peculiar bathymetries and topographies of rock pinnacles, there is no dedicated formula to properly quantify the loads induced by the breaking waves on offshore rock lighthouses. Wienke’s formula (Wienke and Oumeraci (2005) was used in this study to estimate the loads, even though it was not derived for breaking waves on offshore rock lighthouses, but rather for the breaking wave loading on offshore monopiles. However, a thorough sensitivity analysis of the effects of the assumed pressure distribution has never been performed. In this paper, by means of the Wolf Rock lighthouse distinct element model, we quantified the influence of the pressure distributions on the dynamic response of the lighthouse structure. Different pressure distributions were tested, while keeping the initial wave impact area and pressure integrated force unchanged, in order to quantify the effect of different pressure distribution patterns. The pressure distributions considered in this paper showed subtle differences in the overall dynamic structure responses; however, pressure distribution #3, based on published experimental data such as Tanimoto et al. (1986) and Zhou et al. (1991) gave the largest displacements. This scenario has a triangular pressure distribution with a peak at the centroid of the impact area, which then linearly decreases to zero at the top and bottom boundaries of the impact area. The azimuthal horizontal distribution was adopted from Wienke and Oumeraci’s work (2005). The main findings of this study will be of interest not only for the assessment of rock lighthouses but also for all the cylindrical structures built on rock pinnacles or rocky coastlines (with steep foreshore slopes) and exposed to harsh breaking wave loading.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mayilvahanan Alagan Chella ◽  
Hans Bihs ◽  
Arun Kamath ◽  
Dag Myrhaug ◽  
Øivind Asgeir Arnsten

The main purpose of the study is to investigate the breaking wave interaction with a group of four circular cylinders. The physical process of wave breaking involves many parameters and an accurate numerical modelling of breaking waves and the interaction with a structure remain a challenge. In the present study, the open-source (Computational Fluid Dynamics) CFD model REEF3D is used to simulate the breaking wave interaction with the multiple cylinders. The numerical model is based on the incompressible Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations, the level set method for the free surface and the k–ω model for turbulence. The model uses a 5th-order conservative finite difference WENO scheme for the convective discretization and a 3rd-order Runge-Kutta scheme for time discretization. The numerical model is validated with experimental data of large-scale experiments for the free surface elevation and the breaking wave force on a single cylinder. A good agreement is seen between the numerical results and experimental data. Two different configurations with four cylinders are examined: in-line square configuration and diamond square configuration. The breaking wave forces on each cylinder in the group are computed for the two cases and the results are compared with the breaking wave force on a single isolated cylinder. Further, the study investigates the water surface elevations and the free surface flow features around the cylinders. In general, the cylinders in both configurations experience the maximum forces lower than the maximum force on a single cylinder. The results of the present study show that the interference effects from the neighbouring cylinders in a group strongly influence the kinematics around and the breaking wave forces on them.


Author(s):  
Henry Bandringa ◽  
Joop A. Helder

To assess the integrity and safety of structures offshore, prediction of run-up, green water, and impact loads needs to be made during the structure’s design. For predicting these highly non-linear phenomena, most of the offshore industry relies on detailed model testing. In the last couple of years however, CFD simulations have shown more and more promising results in predicting these events, see for instance [1]–[4]. To obtain confidence in the accuracy of CFD simulations in the challenging field of extreme wave impacts, a proper validation of such CFD tools is essential. In this paper two CFD tools are considered for the simulation of a deterministic breaking wave impact on a fixed semi submersible, resulting in flow phenomena like wave run-up, horizontal wave impact and deck impacts. Hereby, one of the CFD tools applies an unstructured gridding approach and implicit free-surface reconstruction, and uses an implicit time integration with a fixed time step. The other CFD tool explicitly reconstructs the free surface on a structured grid and integrates the free surface explicitly in time, using a variable time step. The presented simulations use a compact computational domain with wave absorbing boundary conditions and local grid refinement to reduce CPU time. Besides a typical verification and validation of the results, for one of the CFD tools a sensitivity study is performed in which the influence of small variations in the incoming breaking wave on the overall results is assessed. Such an analysis should provide the industry more insight in the to-be-expected sensitivity (and hence uncertainty) of CFD simulations for these type of applications. Experiments carried out by MARIN are used to validate all the presented simulation results.


2016 ◽  
Vol 128 ◽  
pp. 105-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arun Kamath ◽  
Mayilvahanan Alagan Chella ◽  
Hans Bihs ◽  
Øivind A. Arntsen

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