Numerical investigation of split flows by gravity currents into two-layered stratified water bodies
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cortés Cortés, Alicia; Wells, Mathew G.; Fringer, Oliver B.; Arthur, Robert S.; Rueda Valdivia, Francisco JoséEditorial
American Geophysical Union, Wiley
Materia
Numerical modeling Gravity currents Two-layered stratified basin Multiple intrusions Detrainment
Fecha
2015-07-31Referencia bibliográfica
Cortés, A., M. G. Wells, O. B. Fringer, R. S. Arthur, and F. J. Rueda (2015), Numerical investigation of split flows by gravity currents into two-layered stratified water bodies, J. Geophys. Res. Oceans, 120, 5254-5271, doi: 10.1002/2015JC010722
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (project CGL2008-06101/BOS)Resumen
The behavior of a two-dimensional (2D) gravity current impinging upon a density step in a two-layered stratified basin is analyzed using a high-resolution Reynolds-Averaged Navier Stokes model. The gravity current splits at the density step, and the portion of the buoyancy flux becoming an interflow is largely controlled by the vertical distribution of velocity and density within the gravity current and the magnitude of the density step between the two ambient layers. This is in agreement with recent laboratory observations. The strongest changes in the ambient density profiles occur as a result of the impingement of supercritical currents with strong density contrasts, for which a large portion of the gravity current detaches from the bottom and becomes an interflow. We characterize the current partition process in the simulated experiments using the densimetric Froude number of the current (Fr) across the density step (upstream and downstream). When underflows are formed, more supercritical currents are observed downstream of the density step compared to upstream (Fru < Frd), and thus, stronger mixing of the current with the ambient water downstream. However, when split flows and interflows are formed, smaller Fr values are identified after the current crosses the density step (Fru > Frd), which indicates lower mixing between the current and ambient water after the impingement due to the significant stripping of interfacial material at the density step.





