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Open source flood simulation with a 2D discontinuous-elevation hydrodynamic model
Author(s) -
Gordon L. Herries Davies,
Stephen Roberts
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
weber, t., mcphee, m.j. and anderssen, r.s. (eds) modsim2015, 21st international congress on modelling and simulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.36334/modsim.2015.l5.davies
Subject(s) - elevation (ballistics) , flood myth , digital elevation model , open source , geology , source model , computer science , hydrology (agriculture) , geotechnical engineering , remote sensing , geography , geometry , software , mathematics , archaeology , theoretical computer science , programming language
A new finite volume algorithm to solve the two dimensional shallow water equations on an unstructured triangular mesh has been implemented in the open source ANUGA software, which is jointly developed by the Australian National University and Geoscience Australia. The algorithm supports discontinuouselevation, or ‘jumps’ in the bed profile between neighbouring cells. This has a number of benefits compared with previously implemented continuous-elevation approaches. Firstly it can preserve lake-at-rest type stationary states with wet-dry fronts without using any mesh porosity type treatment (mesh porosity treatments allow the bed to absorb some water as though it were porous). It can also simulate very shallow frictionally dominated flow down sloping topography, as typically occurs in direct-rainfall flood models. In the latter situation, mesh porosity type treatments lead to artificial storage of mass in cells and associated mass conservation issues, whereas continuous-elevation approaches with good performance on shallow frictionally dominated flows tend to have difficulties preserving stationary states near wet-dry fronts. The discontinuous-elevation approach shows good performance in both situations, and mass is conserved to a very high degree, consistent with floating point error. A further benefit of the discontinuous-elevation approach, when combined with an unstructured mesh, is that the model can sharply resolve rapid changes in the topography associated with e.g. narrow prismatic drainage channels, or buildings, without the computational expense of a very fine mesh. The boundaries between such features can be embedded in the mesh using break-lines, and the user can optionally specify that different elevation datasets are used to set the elevation within different parts of the mesh (e.g. often it is convenient to use a raster digital elevation model in terrestrial areas, and surveyed channel bed points in rivers). The discontinuous-elevation approach also supports a simple and computationally efficient treatment of river walls. These are arbitrarily narrow walls between cells, higher than the topography on either side, where the flow is controlled by a weir equation and optionally transitions back to the shallow water solution for sufficiently submerged flows. This allows modelling of levees or lateral weirs which are much finer than the mesh size. A number of benchmark tests are presented illustrating these features of the algorithm. All these features of the model can be run in serial or parallel, on clusters or shared memory machines, with good efficiency improvements on 10s-100s of cores depending on the number of mesh triangles and other case-specific details.

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