Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, 2013 1.

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Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, 2013 Coastal Wave – Surge Modeling R.
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Presentation transcript:

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1,

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Starting Point How do we assess the effects of storm surge on civil infrastructure? Engineering design scenarios imply topographic changes, as do failures. Hundreds of cases may be worth considering.

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Relevance to DHS Gap being addressed: No computationally tractable approach exists for assessing storm surge effects on proposed infrastructure changes and improvements. The DHS mission includes managing risks to critical infrastructure, ensuring resilience to disasters, and mitigating hazards.

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Interface Conditions May be formulated in a variety of ways: – One-way nesting (Spall and Robinson 1989) – Two-way nesting (Debreu and Blayo 2008) – Full coupling (Cailleau et al. 2008) Used to resolve smaller spatial and temporal scale processes

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Levee Failure Scenarios Nesting for infrastructure assessment: (3 different failures, flooding outlined in white)

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Year 5 Activities 1.Subdomain modeling of storm surge and wave effects using ADCIRC and SWAN 2.Time-varying topobathy in ADCIRC using a predetermined set of parameters 3.Additional means of reducing computational cost in simulation approaches

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Storm Surge and Waves SWAN is a phase-averaged spectral wave model with two possible types of boundary conditions: – TPAR files contain significant wave height, wave period, peak direction, and directional spread. – 2D Spectra files contain N discrete frequencies and M directions.

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1,

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Hurricane Fran and Cape Fear

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Hurricane Fran and Cape Fear TPAR Files2D Spectra Files ParameterThresholdNodes% % Significant Wave Height5 cm Wave Period1 sec Peak Direction20⁰ Conclusion: Using 2D spectra files to enforce the boundaries of a subdomain results in accurate and efficient computational modeling for engineering purposes.

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Time-Varying Topobathy The result of a net transport of sand along the ocean bottom or the overtopping and collapse of a dune, or the failure of engineered structures such as levees and geotubes. To accommodate, allow time-varying changes in bathymetric depth DP using a predetermined set of parameters.

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, When bathymetric depth DP changes – adjust water surface elevation ETA to maintain constant water column height – mark node wet for reevaluation – remember prior DP values for consistency in calculating heights H0, H1, and H2

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Test Case: Hatteras Subdomain Extracted from the western North Atlantic grid with refinements for simulating Isabel Inlet

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1,

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Subduration Modeling Subduration modeling is introduced as a means of downscaling hurricane storm surge models in time. The hot-start feature of ADCIRC allows users to begin a run from a specified timestep using initial conditions obtained from a previously performed run. This feature is used to reduce the total runtime of series of simulations where users have made topographic or other changes to a model.

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Step 0 : Begin with an ADCIRC model ETA: Surface Elevation, DP: Bathymetric Depth Subduration Modeling in ADCIRC

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Step 1 : Identify nodes that are part of the changed terrain. Subduration Modeling in ADCIRC

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Step 2 : Record a hot-start file before one of the changed nodes becomes wet. Subduration Modeling in ADCIRC

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Step 3 : Make changes to parts of the terrain (DP) in the fort.14 file. Subduration Modeling in ADCIRC

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Subdomain ADCIRC has been modified so that the original ETA of a changed node is initially set to be equal to changed DP, during a hot-started run. Subduration Modeling in ADCIRC

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Step 4 : Perform the hot-started run. Modified subdomain ADCIRC runs the hot-started simulation as it normally would. Subduration Modeling in ADCIRC

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Test Case: Cape Fear Subdomain Extracted from the western North Atlantic grid with a protective structure to prevent flooding

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Test Case: Cape Fear Subdomain SimulationCPU Hours% Full Run: % Subdomain:282.59% Subduration:70.64%

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Products Software tools for subdomain modeling, modifications to ADCIRC, user scripts, visualization tools, user guide already being distributed. Theses, technical reports, conference talks, articles under review and in preparation.

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1,

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Prospective Collaborators and End Users

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Prospective Collaborators and End Users

Research Lead  The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CHC-R 5 th Annual Meeting January 31-February 1, Looking Forward