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The role of dissipation and mixing in exchange flow through a contracting channel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2000

KRAIG B. WINTERS
Affiliation:
Applied Physics Laboratory and Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
HARVEY E. SEIM
Affiliation:
Skidaway Institute of Oceanography, 110 Ocean Circle, Savannah, GA 31411, USA

Abstract

We investigate the transport of mass and momentum between layers in idealized exchange flow through a contracting channel. Lock-exchange initial value problems are run to approximately steady state using a three-dimensional, non-hydrostatic numerical model. The numerical model resolves the large-scale exchange flow and shear instabilities that form at the interface, parameterizing the effects of subgrid-scale turbulence. The closure scheme is based on an assumed steady, local balance of turbulent production and dissipation in a density-stratified fluid.

The simulated flows are analysed using a two-layer decomposition and compared with predictions from two-layer hydraulic theory. Inter-layer transport leads to a systematic deviation of the simulated maximal exchange flows from predictions. Relative to predictions, the observed flows exhibit lower Froude numbers, larger transports and wider regions of subcritical flow in the contraction. To describe entrainment and mixing between layers, the computed solutions are decomposed into a three-layer structure, with two bounding layers separated by an interfacial layer of finite thickness and variable properties. Both bounding layers lose fluid to the interfacial layer which carries a significant fraction of the horizontal transport. Entrainment is greatest from the faster moving layer, occurring preferentially downstream of the contraction.

Bottom friction exerts a drag on the lower layer, fundamentally altering the overall dynamics of the exchange. An example where bed friction leads to a submaximal exchange is discussed. The external forcing required to sustain a net transport is significantly less than predicted in the absence of bottom stresses.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2000 Cambridge University Press

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