CFD modelling of initial stages of dam-break flow
Saeid Esmaeeli Mohsenabadi, Ioan Nistor, Abdolmajid Mohammadian, Hossein Kheirkhah Gildeh- General Environmental Science
- Civil and Structural Engineering
Cases of dam failures are seen almost every year globally, and the propagation of rapidly varying unsteady flows resulting from those dam failures has significant environmental and economic consequences. A three-dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics model was created to solve unsteady Reynolds-Averaged equations to investigate the generation and propagation of dam-break flows and reflected flood waves in the presence of a trapezoidal bottom obstacle. The dam-breaks were modelled using OpenFOAM based on the Volume of Fluid method employing the Finite Volume Method, and the performance of various Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes turbulence models, including the realizable k − ε, SST k − ω (Shear Stress Transport k − ω), and v2 − f models, has been evaluated. To assess the capabilities of the different turbulence models, quantitative comparisons of numerical simulations with laboratory experiments were completed, and it was found that the SST k − ω model performed better in predicting the free surface profiles and negative bore propagation speeds than the realizable k − ε and v2 − f models.