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Scale effects in numerical modelling of beach profile erosion
The beach profile morphodynamic processes can be relatively well reproduced in large scale physical models. However, the cost associated to their use makes this methodology not always practicable. As alternative, it is desirable to explore and apply smaller scales laboratory infrastructures with con...
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Published in: | Journal of coastal research 2013-01, Vol.2 (65), p.1815-1815 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The beach profile morphodynamic processes can be relatively well reproduced in large scale physical models. However, the cost associated to their use makes this methodology not always practicable. As alternative, it is desirable to explore and apply smaller scales laboratory infrastructures with confidence, despite the different scaling laws, that is, the impossibility to simulate all relevant variables in correct relationship to each other. The combination of physical and numerical modelling can be a methodology to improve the required confidence (HYDRALAB III European Programme). Scale effects in a numerical process-based beach profile model, applied to simulate beach profile evolution under erosive wave conditions, were investigated in the present study. The numerical model was applied at laboratory and prototype scales, first with the default settings and then calibrated. Its performance was evaluated using the Brier Skill Score. The numerical results of the profile evolution in both scales were compared after reducing the results from the prototype scale to the laboratory scale. The profile erosion prediction was overestimated in the laboratory scale and underestimated in the prototype scale. Despite the calibration parameter that causes the largest modifications of the beach profile being the same in both scales, the Gamma2 wave parameter, the most efficient parameter was different. For most of the calibration parameters, the value for the best case was not coincident in both scales. It was concluded that there are scale effects using the Litprof model. |
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ISSN: | 0749-0208 1551-5036 |
DOI: | 10.2112/SI65-307 |