Abstract
The influence of directional spreading of waves is significant for wave-induced loads, wave breaking and nonlinearity of the waves. For physical model testing performed at test facilities such as the Ocean and Coastal Engineering Laboratory at Aalborg University, it is crucial to validate if the test conditions match the target sea states by measurement and analysis of the generated directional wave field. Most of the existing methods assumes a double summation sea state to be present which is valid in the prototype. However, waves in the laboratory are usually generated by single summation. The current paper presents a method to analyse short-crested waves generated by the single summation method. Compared to similar methods oblique reflections are considered instead of only in-line reflections. The results show that the method successfully decomposes the incident and reflected wave fields in the time domain. Thus, for example the incident wave height distribution may be obtained. The sensitivity of the new method to additional reflective directions, noise, calibration errors and positional errors of the wave gauges was found small.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 36 |
Journal | JOURNAL OF COASTAL AND HYDRAULIC STRUCTURES |
Volume | 4 |
Number of pages | 15 |
ISSN | 2667-047X |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2 Dec 2024 |
Event | Coastlab24: 9th Conference on Physical Modelling in Coastal Engineering - Delft, Netherlands Duration: 13 May 2024 → 16 May 2024 |
Conference
Conference | Coastlab24: 9th Conference on Physical Modelling in Coastal Engineering |
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Country/Territory | Netherlands |
City | Delft |
Period | 13/05/2024 → 16/05/2024 |
Bibliographical note
This paper is part of the Thematic Series of selected papers on advances in physical modelling and measurement of Coastal Engineering issues, as presented on the Coastlab Conference in Delft in 2024.Keywords
- Wave Analysis
- Directional Spectrum Estimation
- Directional Spreading Function
- Single Summation Method
- Wave Reflection