Bulletin of the American Physical Society
71st Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume 63, Number 13
Sunday–Tuesday, November 18–20, 2018; Atlanta, Georgia
Session E29: Environmental Flows II
5:10 PM–6:28 PM,
Sunday, November 18, 2018
Georgia World Congress Center
Room: B401
Chair: Alain Pumir, Ecole Normale Superieure
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DFD.E29.2
Abstract: E29.00002 : Impact of streamwise heterogeneity due to gaps and patchiness on canopy flow dynamics
5:23 PM–5:36 PM
Presenter:
Hayoon Chung
(Stanford Univ)
Authors:
Hayoon Chung
(Stanford Univ)
Tracy Mandel
(Stanford Univ)
Saksham Gakhar
(Stanford Univ)
Jeffrey R Koseff
(Stanford Univ)
Canopies such as seagrass meadows alter their environment by impacting the flow and turbulent structures. However, unlike well-studied homogenous canopies in which fully developed mixed layers develop, most aquatic canopies display patchiness, e.g. gaps/clearings that alter the flow. We aim to answer the question: how will gaps and patchiness affect the flow characteristics in a canopy system?
We conducted experiments in a recirculating flume with model vegetation. The canopy is interrupted by a spanwise homogeneous gap, and momentum and turbulent statistics were observed in the gap and in the wake. Observations suggest that there is a critical length of canopies over which the canopy will fully develop the flow (mean/turbulent), and downstream characteristics will be identical regardless of the upstream gap. But below this threshold, the turbulence downstream is affected by the upstream gaps. Changing the gap lengths brings about two major phenomena. First, it affects the decay of the mixing layer in the gap before it re-enters the downstream canopy segment and impacts local momentum fluxes. Second, depending on packing density of the fragments, we may observe canopy segments behaving independently of one another, interacting with one another, or essentially uninterrupted flow.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DFD.E29.2
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