Target Element Sizes For Finite Element Tidal Models From A Domain-wide, Localized Truncation Error Analysis Incorporating Botto

A new methodology for the determination of target element sizes for the construction of finite element meshes applicable to the simulation of tidal flow in coastal and oceanic domains is developed and tested. The methodology is consistent with the discrete physics of tidal flow, and includes the eff...

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Main Author: Parrish, Denwood
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: STARS 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd/3292
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4292&context=etd
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spelling ftunicentralflor:oai:stars.library.ucf.edu:etd-4292 2023-05-15T17:37:03+02:00 Target Element Sizes For Finite Element Tidal Models From A Domain-wide, Localized Truncation Error Analysis Incorporating Botto Parrish, Denwood 2007-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd/3292 https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4292&context=etd English eng STARS https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd/3292 https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4292&context=etd Electronic Theses and Dissertations mesh generation grid generation tidal modeling finite elements truncation error analysis coastal engineering complex derivatives estuarine modeling Civil Engineering Engineering text 2007 ftunicentralflor 2021-12-21T11:30:33Z A new methodology for the determination of target element sizes for the construction of finite element meshes applicable to the simulation of tidal flow in coastal and oceanic domains is developed and tested. The methodology is consistent with the discrete physics of tidal flow, and includes the effects of bottom stress. The method enables the estimation of the localized truncation error of the nonconservative momentum equations throughout a triangulated data set of water surface elevation and flow velocity. The method's domain-wide applicability is due in part to the formulation of a new localized truncation error estimator in terms of complex derivatives. More conventional criteria that are often used to determine target element sizes are limited to certain bathymetric conditions. The methodology developed herein is applicable over a broad range of bathymetric conditions, and can be implemented efficiently. Since the methodology permits the determination of target element size at points up to and including the coastal boundary, it is amenable to coastal domain applications including estuaries, embayments, and riverine systems. These applications require consideration of spatially varying bottom stress and advective terms, addressed herein. The new method, called LTEA-CD (localized truncation error analysis with complex derivatives), is applied to model solutions over the Western North Atlantic Tidal model domain (the bodies of water lying west of the 60° W meridian). The convergence properties of LTEACD are also analyzed. It is found that LTEA-CD may be used to build a series of meshes that produce converging solutions of the shallow water equations. An enhanced version of the new methodology, LTEA+CD (which accounts for locally variable bottom stress and Coriolis terms) is used to generate a mesh of the WNAT model domain having 25% fewer nodes and elements than an existing mesh upon which it is based; performance of the two meshes, in an average sense, is indistinguishable when considering elevation tidal signals. Finally, LTEA+CD is applied to the development of a mesh for the Loxahatchee River estuary; it is found that application of LTEA+CD provides a target element size distribution that, when implemented, outperforms a high-resolution semi-uniform mesh as well as a manually constructed, existing, documented mesh. Text North Atlantic University of Central Florida (UCF): STARS (Showcase of Text, Archives, Research & Scholarship)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Central Florida (UCF): STARS (Showcase of Text, Archives, Research & Scholarship)
op_collection_id ftunicentralflor
language English
topic mesh generation
grid generation
tidal modeling
finite elements
truncation error analysis
coastal engineering
complex derivatives
estuarine modeling
Civil Engineering
Engineering
spellingShingle mesh generation
grid generation
tidal modeling
finite elements
truncation error analysis
coastal engineering
complex derivatives
estuarine modeling
Civil Engineering
Engineering
Parrish, Denwood
Target Element Sizes For Finite Element Tidal Models From A Domain-wide, Localized Truncation Error Analysis Incorporating Botto
topic_facet mesh generation
grid generation
tidal modeling
finite elements
truncation error analysis
coastal engineering
complex derivatives
estuarine modeling
Civil Engineering
Engineering
description A new methodology for the determination of target element sizes for the construction of finite element meshes applicable to the simulation of tidal flow in coastal and oceanic domains is developed and tested. The methodology is consistent with the discrete physics of tidal flow, and includes the effects of bottom stress. The method enables the estimation of the localized truncation error of the nonconservative momentum equations throughout a triangulated data set of water surface elevation and flow velocity. The method's domain-wide applicability is due in part to the formulation of a new localized truncation error estimator in terms of complex derivatives. More conventional criteria that are often used to determine target element sizes are limited to certain bathymetric conditions. The methodology developed herein is applicable over a broad range of bathymetric conditions, and can be implemented efficiently. Since the methodology permits the determination of target element size at points up to and including the coastal boundary, it is amenable to coastal domain applications including estuaries, embayments, and riverine systems. These applications require consideration of spatially varying bottom stress and advective terms, addressed herein. The new method, called LTEA-CD (localized truncation error analysis with complex derivatives), is applied to model solutions over the Western North Atlantic Tidal model domain (the bodies of water lying west of the 60° W meridian). The convergence properties of LTEACD are also analyzed. It is found that LTEA-CD may be used to build a series of meshes that produce converging solutions of the shallow water equations. An enhanced version of the new methodology, LTEA+CD (which accounts for locally variable bottom stress and Coriolis terms) is used to generate a mesh of the WNAT model domain having 25% fewer nodes and elements than an existing mesh upon which it is based; performance of the two meshes, in an average sense, is indistinguishable when considering elevation tidal signals. Finally, LTEA+CD is applied to the development of a mesh for the Loxahatchee River estuary; it is found that application of LTEA+CD provides a target element size distribution that, when implemented, outperforms a high-resolution semi-uniform mesh as well as a manually constructed, existing, documented mesh.
format Text
author Parrish, Denwood
author_facet Parrish, Denwood
author_sort Parrish, Denwood
title Target Element Sizes For Finite Element Tidal Models From A Domain-wide, Localized Truncation Error Analysis Incorporating Botto
title_short Target Element Sizes For Finite Element Tidal Models From A Domain-wide, Localized Truncation Error Analysis Incorporating Botto
title_full Target Element Sizes For Finite Element Tidal Models From A Domain-wide, Localized Truncation Error Analysis Incorporating Botto
title_fullStr Target Element Sizes For Finite Element Tidal Models From A Domain-wide, Localized Truncation Error Analysis Incorporating Botto
title_full_unstemmed Target Element Sizes For Finite Element Tidal Models From A Domain-wide, Localized Truncation Error Analysis Incorporating Botto
title_sort target element sizes for finite element tidal models from a domain-wide, localized truncation error analysis incorporating botto
publisher STARS
publishDate 2007
url https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd/3292
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4292&context=etd
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Electronic Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd/3292
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4292&context=etd
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