Effects of Vertical Variation in Vegetation Density on Wave Attenuation

被引:19
|
作者
Wu, Wei-Cheng [1 ]
Cox, Daniel T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Oregon State Univ, Sch Civil & Construct Engn, 101 Kearney Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA
关键词
Wave attenuation; Vertically varying vegetation; Drag coefficient; Physical model; SALT-MARSH VEGETATION; EMERGENT VEGETATION; WETLAND; DEPTH;
D O I
10.1061/(ASCE)WW.1943-5460.0000326
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
A physical model experiment was used to investigate irregular wave attenuation through emergent vegetation with variations in stem heights. The experiment was conducted with six peak periods, six incident wave heights, and two schemes of vegetation. One scheme used uniform vegetation (constant stem height) and the other scheme approximated vegetation with larger biomass near the bottom and decreasing linearly to the surface, consistent with observed biomass patterns in the field. Although distributions were different, the total vertical projected area was kept constant between the two schemes. The cross shore variation of wave heights across the vegetation were measured, and losses due to sidewall and bottom friction effects were measured and removed from the wave attenuation in the vegetated cases to isolate the influence of vegetation. The normalized wave height attenuation for each case was fit to the decay equation to determine the difference of vegetation transmission coefficients K-v and damping factor . The drag coefficients C-D were estimated under the assumption of uniform, rigid vegetation and linear wave theory. This paper shows that in deeper water, the damping coefficient for the uniform vegetation is higher than that of the nonuniform vegetation because the wave-induced velocity decays exponentially with depth and is less affected by the biomass near the bottom. In shallower water, the ratio of the damping coefficients tends toward unity for the two schemes because the wave-induced velocity is nearly uniform and the vertical projected area was the same between the two schemes. In addition, this study highlights that the effect of vertical biomass distributions can result in changes in C-D ranging from 140% to 170% between the two schemes and that the assumption of a uniform distribution of vegetation biomass is likely more critical than the assumption of rigid vegetation to model wave attenuation due to vegetation.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Surface wave attenuation by vegetation with the stem, root and canopy
    He, Fei
    Chen, Jie
    Jiang, Changbo
    COASTAL ENGINEERING, 2019, 152
  • [32] Wave attenuation over combined salt marsh vegetation
    Zhao, Ying
    Peng, Zhong
    He, Qing
    Ma, Yuxi
    OCEAN ENGINEERING, 2023, 267
  • [33] Modeling wave attenuation by vegetation with accompanying currents in SWAN
    Hong Wang
    Zhan Hu
    Acta Oceanologica Sinica, 2023, 42 : 63 - 76
  • [34] Wave attenuation by flexible, idealized salt marsh vegetation
    Anderson, M. E.
    Smith, J. M.
    COASTAL ENGINEERING, 2014, 83 : 82 - 92
  • [35] Wave Attenuation by Vegetation: Model Implementation and Validation Study
    Abdolali, Ali
    Hesser, Tyler J.
    Anderson Bryant, Mary
    Roland, Aron
    Khalid, Arslaan
    Smith, Jane
    Ferreira, Celso
    Mehra, Avichal
    Sikiric, Mathieu Dutour
    FRONTIERS IN BUILT ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 8
  • [36] New Implementation in SWAN for Quantifying Wave Attenuation by Vegetation
    Lopez-Arias, Fernando
    Maza, Maria
    Lara, Javier L.
    Losada, Inigo J.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 39TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, 2022, : 5584 - 5587
  • [37] Effects of Vegetation Density and Wetland Aspect Ratio Variation on Hydraulic Efficiency of Wetlands
    Sabokrouhiyeh, Nima
    Bottacin-Busolin, Andrea
    Nepf, Heidi
    Marion, Andrea
    HYDRODYNAMIC AND MASS TRANSPORT AT FRESHWATER AQUATIC INTERFACES, 2016, : 101 - 113
  • [38] Exploring the Effects of Density and Configuration on Wave Attenuation through Mangrove Living Shorelines
    Cassidy, Christopher
    Tomiczek, Tori
    OCEANS 2021: SAN DIEGO - PORTO, 2021,
  • [39] Numerical investigation of the effects of coastal vegetation zone width on wave run-up attenuation
    Tang, Jun
    Zhao, Chuyan
    Shen, Yongming
    OCEAN ENGINEERING, 2019, 189
  • [40] Wave attenuation by rigid emergent vegetation under combined wave and current flows
    Yin, Zegao
    Wang, Yanxu
    Liu, Yong
    Zou, Wei
    OCEAN ENGINEERING, 2020, 213