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Numerical and Physical Experiments of Wave Focusing in Short- Crested Seas

Rogue Waves’2004, Brest. Numerical and Physical Experiments of Wave Focusing in Short- Crested Seas. Félicien Bonnefoy, Pierre Roux de Reilhac, David Le Touzé and Pierre Ferrant Ecole Centrale de Nantes, France. Wave elevation record. Time in s. Topic of the talk.

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Numerical and Physical Experiments of Wave Focusing in Short- Crested Seas

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  1. Rogue Waves’2004, Brest Numerical and Physical Experiments of Wave Focusing in Short- Crested Seas Félicien Bonnefoy, Pierre Roux de Reilhac, David Le Touzé and Pierre Ferrant Ecole Centrale de Nantes, France

  2. Wave elevation record Time in s. Topic of the talk • Generation of deterministic wave packets in a numerical or physical wave basin • Wavemaker motion • Fully-nonlinear waves • In 2 and 3 dimensions • (mono- and multidirectional) • Numerical tool: • Spectral method • with high-order technique • Non-periodic • Specific treatment for wavemaking

  3. on Theoretical Framework • Potential flow theory and • Free surface potential • Fully-nonlinear free surface conditions

  4. Time evolution strategy unknown: the only non surfacic quantity on on Nonlinear Free surface equations Time-marching Runge-Kutta 4 Separately approximated by an High-Order technique

  5. Standard Higher-Order Techniques • The two main methods available are: • Higher-Order Spectral HOS (West et al 1987, Dommermuth and Yue 1987) Formal and Taylor series expansion of the potential only (not for equations) to obtain the vertical velocity. • Dirichlet to Neumann Operator DNO (Craig and Sulem 1993) Formal and Taylor series expansion of the DNO only (not for equations) ie the normal velocity. • Decomposition in recursive Dirichlet problems solved by Fourier spectral method and collocation nodes

  6. F(x+Lx , y) = F(x , y) • F(x , y+Ly) = F(x , y) High-Order Method • Advantages: • Fast solvers with computational costs in O(NlogN) thanks to the use of Fast Fourier Transforms. Large number of wave components for random seas or steep wave fields. • High accuracy of the spectral methods • Limitations of the HOS method: • Non-breaking cases Steep wave field involves high order nonlinearities • increase the number of modes • dealiase carefully • Sawtooth instabilities for very steep wave calculations  Standard five-point smoothing applied regularly through the steepest simulations or decrease of the number of modes • Standard Higher-Order Simulations • Periodic boundary conditions on the free surface • Initial stage: Free surface elevation and potential specified at t=0 • Pneumatic wave generation

  7. A High-Order Approach for Wave Basin • Basin with rigid walls By simply changing the basis functions on which we expand our solution: The natural modes of the basin • Cosine functions Still possible to use Fast Fourier Transforms • A wavemaker to generate the waves starting from rest (no initial wave description required) • The concept of additionnal potential (Agnon and Bingham 1999) • Inlet flux condition • solved in an extended basin

  8. Wavemaker modellingInlet Flux Condition • Resolution of the additional potential in a extended basin • Extensively validated in a previous second order model (Bonnefoy et al ISOPE’02, Bonnefoy et al OMAE’04) • In 3D: segmented wavemaker • Improved control laws (Dalrymple method for large wave angles) Also solved by spectral method

  9. Wave elevation record Wavemaker motion Time in s. Time in s. Applications • Improved deterministic reproduction technique in 2D • Deterministic reproduction of directional focused wave packets in 3D

  10. Wave elevation record Time in s. Deterministic reproduction in 2D • Characteristics: • Steep wave packet: kpAl = 0.26 • Asymetric in time • Wavemaker motion to reproduce this wave field • Control in the frequency domain with a set of components: amplitude, phase (+ angle in case of 3D generation) Wave probe Wavemaker Basin dimensions: 50m long 5m deep

  11. Wave elevation record Wave probe Wavemaker Wavemaker motion Time in s. Time in s. Analytical methods • Linear backward propagation: reverse phase method (e.g.Mansard and Funke 1982) • Second-order bound correction of amplitudes (e.g.Duncan and Drake 1995) Wavemaker Transfer Function

  12. Target Before iteration After 5 iterations Iterative corrections Target wave n=1 Comparison to the target after Fourier analysis Non-linear simulation hn(t) Corrected motion Initial guess Correction on amplitudes and/or phases Target First order input Second order input Without iteration With iterations Elevation in m. Elevation in m. Time in s. Time in s.

  13. A first step towards higher order control of nonlinearities • In litterature: analytical-empirical approach Clauss et al (OMAE’04) • Crest and trough focusing • Johannessen et Swan (PRSL 2001) • Zang et al (OMAE 2004) • Bateman (PhD Thesis 2001) • Separation in odd and even orders • Phase modification by third order effects is present in odd and even elevation

  14. Target wave packet Crest focusing Trough focusing First order Odd elevation Second order Even elevation Validation with a small amplitude wave packetSecond order effects • 10 cm amplitude wave packet (at the focusing point) for 5 m mean wavelength • Nonlinear effects reduced to second order • Good agreement between first order and odd elevation, and between second order and even elevation Time in s. Time in s. Measured elevations Odd-even decomposition

  15. linear phase velocity nonlinear phase velocity even elevation linear phase velocity nonlinear phase velocity odd elevation Third order effects for higher wave amplitude • Resonant Interactions • No instabilities detected (in contrast with Johannessen and Swan (PRSL 2001) • Phase velocity • Non resonant Interactions • Bound terms • Example with a 30 cm wave packet To build the linear elevation Elevation in m. Elevation in m. Time in s. Time in s. Odd and linear elevation Even and second order elevation

  16. Application to deterministic reproduction Wavemaker motion corrected with the phase shift due to nonlinear phase speed modification Initial decomposition : second order Initial decomposition : linear Elevation in m. Elevation in m. Time in s. Time in s. • The main features of the focused target wave packet are well reproduced with only one correction of the wavemaker motion (no iteration so far) • Central crest and lateral troughs are close to the target both in amplitudes and phases • Central crest amplitude is correctly estimated • Better control of the high-frequency waves

  17. t = 25 s. t = 45 s. Focused wave packet reproduction in 3D • Directional irregular wave field S(f,q) = S(f) D(q,f) • Modified Pierson-Moskowitz spectrum (fpeak=0.5Hz, Hs= 4 cm) • Directional spreading with s=10 • Focusing time t=45 s • Elevation recorded in 5 locations (probe array used for short-crested seas analysis)

  18. Reproduction of a directional focused wave field Analysis in the frequency domain (for the 5 probes) Three unknowns at each frequency : A set of nonlinear equations solved with a nonlinear least squares method (local minima are expected) and different initial guesses We obtain a set of solutions of the nonlinear equations: we choose the one that minimises

  19. Directional focused wave field Simulated wave packets with the HOS model of the wave basin for both the focused target and the reproduced wave packet Reproduced wave field Target wave field fp = 0.5 Hz, Hs = 4 cm Directional spreading s=10 Focusing time t = 45 s Prescribed snake-like wavemaker motion Large waves angles generated with the Dalrymple method

  20. Directional focused wave field View of the wave field before the focusing event at t = 33.5 s Target wave field Reproduced wave field • The main features of the focusing packet are correctly reproduced • The high-fequency range is underestimated in the predicted wavemaker motion

  21. Directional focused wave field View of the wave field at the focusing event t = 45 s Target wave field Reproduced wave field • Underestimation of the wave crest • Overestimation of the width of the crest

  22. Conclusion • High-Order Spectral method applied to the wave generation in a wave basin • Improvement of the wavemaker motion for the generation of deterministic wave packets • Part of third order effects (phase velocity) taken into account in 2D • Attempt of deterministic reproduction in 3D Future work • Phase velocity correction applied iteratively • Application to different kinds of wave packets (narrow-banded, broad-banded…)

  23. Comparison between numerical simulations and experiments Amplitude 40 cm Amplitude 30 cm

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