Numerical Study of Three-Dimensional Surface Jets Emerging from a Fishway Entrance Slot

The efficiency of a fishway is determined by the ability of immigrating fish to follow its attraction flow (i.e., its jet) to locate and enter the fishway entrance. The hydraulic characteristics of fishway entrance jets can be simplified using findings from widely investigated surface jets produced...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lena Mahl, Patrick Heneka, Martin Henning, Roman B. Weichert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
DES
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/8/1079
id doaj-351b9cdc56f14a3291ef34357fa5aa5e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-351b9cdc56f14a3291ef34357fa5aa5e2021-04-14T23:03:03ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412021-04-01131079107910.3390/w13081079Numerical Study of Three-Dimensional Surface Jets Emerging from a Fishway Entrance SlotLena Mahl0Patrick Heneka1Martin Henning2Roman B. Weichert3Federal Waterways Engineering and Research Institute (BAW), 76187 Karlsruhe, GermanyFederal Waterways Engineering and Research Institute (BAW), 76187 Karlsruhe, GermanyFederal Waterways Engineering and Research Institute (BAW), 76187 Karlsruhe, GermanyFederal Waterways Engineering and Research Institute (BAW), 76187 Karlsruhe, GermanyThe efficiency of a fishway is determined by the ability of immigrating fish to follow its attraction flow (i.e., its jet) to locate and enter the fishway entrance. The hydraulic characteristics of fishway entrance jets can be simplified using findings from widely investigated surface jets produced by shaped nozzles. However, the effect of the different boundary conditions of fishway entrance jets (characterized by vertical entrance slots) compared to nozzle jets must be considered. We investigate the downstream propagation of attraction jets from the vertical slot of a fishway entrance into a quiescent tailrace, considering the following boundary conditions not considered for nozzle jets: (1) slot geometry, (2) turbulence characteristics of the approach flow to the slot, and (3) presence of a lateral wall downstream of the slot. We quantify the effect of these boundary conditions using three-dimensional hydrodynamic-numeric flow simulations with DES and RANS turbulence models and a volume-of-fluid method (VoF) to simulate the free water surface. In addition, we compare jet propagation with existing analytical methods for describing jet propagations from nozzles. We show that a turbulent and inhomogeneous approach flow towards a vertical slot reduces the propagation length of the slot jet in the tailrace due to increased lateral spreading compared to that of a jet produced by a shaped nozzle. An additional lateral wall in the tailrace reduces lateral spreading and significantly increases the propagation length. For highly turbulent flows at fishway entrances, the RANS model tends to overestimate the jet propagation compared to the transient DES model.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/8/1079turbulent rectangular jetvertical slotattraction flowlateral wallDESRANS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lena Mahl
Patrick Heneka
Martin Henning
Roman B. Weichert
spellingShingle Lena Mahl
Patrick Heneka
Martin Henning
Roman B. Weichert
Numerical Study of Three-Dimensional Surface Jets Emerging from a Fishway Entrance Slot
Water
turbulent rectangular jet
vertical slot
attraction flow
lateral wall
DES
RANS
author_facet Lena Mahl
Patrick Heneka
Martin Henning
Roman B. Weichert
author_sort Lena Mahl
title Numerical Study of Three-Dimensional Surface Jets Emerging from a Fishway Entrance Slot
title_short Numerical Study of Three-Dimensional Surface Jets Emerging from a Fishway Entrance Slot
title_full Numerical Study of Three-Dimensional Surface Jets Emerging from a Fishway Entrance Slot
title_fullStr Numerical Study of Three-Dimensional Surface Jets Emerging from a Fishway Entrance Slot
title_full_unstemmed Numerical Study of Three-Dimensional Surface Jets Emerging from a Fishway Entrance Slot
title_sort numerical study of three-dimensional surface jets emerging from a fishway entrance slot
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2021-04-01
description The efficiency of a fishway is determined by the ability of immigrating fish to follow its attraction flow (i.e., its jet) to locate and enter the fishway entrance. The hydraulic characteristics of fishway entrance jets can be simplified using findings from widely investigated surface jets produced by shaped nozzles. However, the effect of the different boundary conditions of fishway entrance jets (characterized by vertical entrance slots) compared to nozzle jets must be considered. We investigate the downstream propagation of attraction jets from the vertical slot of a fishway entrance into a quiescent tailrace, considering the following boundary conditions not considered for nozzle jets: (1) slot geometry, (2) turbulence characteristics of the approach flow to the slot, and (3) presence of a lateral wall downstream of the slot. We quantify the effect of these boundary conditions using three-dimensional hydrodynamic-numeric flow simulations with DES and RANS turbulence models and a volume-of-fluid method (VoF) to simulate the free water surface. In addition, we compare jet propagation with existing analytical methods for describing jet propagations from nozzles. We show that a turbulent and inhomogeneous approach flow towards a vertical slot reduces the propagation length of the slot jet in the tailrace due to increased lateral spreading compared to that of a jet produced by a shaped nozzle. An additional lateral wall in the tailrace reduces lateral spreading and significantly increases the propagation length. For highly turbulent flows at fishway entrances, the RANS model tends to overestimate the jet propagation compared to the transient DES model.
topic turbulent rectangular jet
vertical slot
attraction flow
lateral wall
DES
RANS
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/8/1079
work_keys_str_mv AT lenamahl numericalstudyofthreedimensionalsurfacejetsemergingfromafishwayentranceslot
AT patrickheneka numericalstudyofthreedimensionalsurfacejetsemergingfromafishwayentranceslot
AT martinhenning numericalstudyofthreedimensionalsurfacejetsemergingfromafishwayentranceslot
AT romanbweichert numericalstudyofthreedimensionalsurfacejetsemergingfromafishwayentranceslot
_version_ 1721526774858252288