University
of Texas at Austin, Department of Civil, Architectural & Environmental
Engineering
Basic information about CWR-ELCOM (Technical
manuals)
Numerical Techniques in CWR-ELCOM- a technical report outlining the detailed numerical implementaton
of the model. Citation: Hodges,
Ben. R. (2000). Numerical techniques in CWR-ELCOM. Centre
for Water Research, University of Western Australia. Technical Report
WP 1422-BH, 37 pgs. <web
abstract> <download
pdf (300 KB)>
CWR-ELCOM User Guide -
a brief outline of the basic concepts of operating CWR-ELCOM. Since
the code is a resesarch tool and is continually undergoing revision,
the user guide is generally out of date. Citation:
Laval, Bernard, and Ben R. Hodges (2000). The CWR Estuary and Lake
Computer Model ELCOM User Guide. Centre for Water Research, University
of Western Australia. Technical Report, 67pgs. <web
abstract> <download
pdf (400 KB)>
Heat budget and thermodynamics at a
free surface - a review of the state-of-the-science
in modeling surface heat transfer and the techniques used in CWR-ELCOM.
Citation: Hodges, Ben. R. (2000). Heat
budget and thermodynamics at a free surface. Centre for Water
Research, The University of Western Australia. Technical Report
ED 1300 BH, 14 pgs. <web
abstract> <download
pdf (370 KB)>
The CWR-ELCOM hydrodynamics model has been used extensively in
research since 1997. While I try to keep this list up to date, it
shouldn't be considered an exhaustive enumeration. For a list of
all my papers (and only my papers) <click
here>
If you are interested in the nuts and bolts of the code, the best
place to start with the technical report Numerical Techniques
in CWR-ELCOM (at right).
Peer-reviewed journal papers and conference papers with CWR-ELCOM
applications and model details are listed below.
Modeling basin-scale
internal waves in a stratified lake (2000)- The advanced
mixed-layer model algorithm used in CWR-ELCOM is described, and
the model's ability to represent the large internal wave signatures
in Lake Kinneret, Israel, is demonstrated. Direct comparisons to
extensive field data are made, with very favorable results. Reprints
are available on request.
Citation: Hodges, B.R., J. Imberger,
A. Saggio, and K. B. Winters,"Modeling basin-scale internal
waves in a stratified lake." Limnology and Oceanography
45:(7):1603-1620, (2000). <web
abstract> <pdf
of first page>
Simple curvilinear method for numerical
methods of open channels (2001) - A Cartesian grid
model (CWR-ELCOM) can be converted into a curvilinear model with
relatively small effort through the use of a perturbation expansion
approach - which is valid as long as the width of the system is
smaller than the large-scale radius of curvature (a typical case
for rivers and narrow reservoirs). This also allows estimation of
the scales of error for models which "straighten" the
curves in a river. Reprints are available on
request. This paper is complemented by a more detailed technical
report <more
info>. A related paper on straightening reservoir bathymetry
was also presented at a conference <more
info>. Citation: Hodges, B.R.,
and J. Imberger. "Simple curvilinear method for numerical methods
of open channels." Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
127: (11): 949-958, (2001). <web
abstract> <pdf
of first page>
Impacts of Hydrological Changes on Phytoplankton
Succession in the Swan River, Western Australia (2002)-
The CWR-ELCOM hydrodynamic code is linked to the CAEDYM water quality
code (also developed at CWR) to examine the species succession in
the Swan River and how changes in the catchment during European
settlement and development may have altered the ecosystem behavior.
Citation: Chan, T.U., D.P. Hamilton,
B.J. Robson, B.R. Hodges, and C. Dallimore. "Impacts of hydrological
change on phytoplankton succession in the Swan River, Western Australia."
Estuaries 25: 1406-1415, (2002). <web
abstract> <pdf
of first page>
Modeling Circulation in Lakes: Spatial
and Temporal Variations (2003) - The effects of spatial
and temporal variations in the wind field are examined with the
CWR-ELCOM model and field data. The mixed-layer algorithm in CWR-ELCOM
is improved with a mixing time-scale to provide temporal invariance
in results as the time step is changed. Citation:
Laval, B., J. Imberger, B.R. Hodges, R. Stocker, “Modeling
Circulation in Lakes: Spatial and Temporal Variations,” Limnology
and Oceanography, 48:(3):983-994 (2003). <web
abstract> <pdf
of first page> <download
paper from L&O (420KB)>
Reducing Numerical Diffusion Effects
with Pycnocline Filter (2003) - A methodology is proposed
to counter the cumulative effects of numerical diffusion for models
of density-stratified systems. The accumulation of even small amounts
of diffusion over a long simulation can signifcantly distort the
properties of internal waves. This journal paper is related to a
prior conference paper <more
info> Citation: Laval, B., B.R.
Hodges, and J. Imberger, "Reducing Numerical Diffusion Effects
with Pycnocline Filter." Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
129: (3): 215-224 (2003). <web
abstract> <pdf
of first page>
Coupling an underflow model to a 3D
hydrodynamic model (2003) - To solve problems of "numerical
convective entrainment" when high-density water flows under
low-density water, we develop a method to couple a 2D benthic boundary
model to 3D CWR-ELCOM. It is demonstrated with field data from Lake
Ogawara, Japan, and Lake Kinneret, Israel, that the coupled model
maintains coherent underflow characteristics that cannot be captured
by a 3D model alone. Citation: Dallimore,
C., B.R. Hodges, and J. Imberger, "Coupling an underflow model
to a 3D hydrodynamic model." Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
129: (10): 748-757, (2003). <web
abstract> <pdf
of first page>
Modeling a Plunging
Underflow (2004) - This is an extension of the work
Dallimore et al., 2003 (see above). In this paper the method for
coupling a 2D benthic boundary layer model to a 3D model is extended
to handle plunging underflows.Citation:
Dallimore, C.J., J. Imberger and B.R. Hodges, “Modeling a
Plunging Underflow,” ASCE Journal of Hydraulic Engineering,
130(11): 1068-1076, (2004). <web
abstract> <pdf
of first page>
Accuracy order of Crank-Nicolson discretization
for hydrostatic free surface flow (2004) - This examines
the use of C-N discretization in CWR-ELCOM for the free surface,
and derives a correction term that is necessary to preserve formal
second-order accuracy. Of particular interest is a demonstration
accuracy of the free surface solution for free waves is less than
second-order when the barotropic CFL is greater than unity. Some
initial results associated with this paper were presented at a conference
<more
info>. The complete paper on this topic will appear
in the August 2004 issue of Journal of Engineering Mechanics. Citation:
.Hodges, B.R., “Accuracy order of Crank-Nicolson Discretization
for Hydrostatic Free Surface Flow,” ASCE
Journal of Engineering Mechanics, 130(8): 904-910 (2004).
<web abstract>
<pdf
of first page>
Hydrostatic and Non-hydrostatic Internal
Wave Models (2004) - A non-hydrostatic solver is added
to ELCOM (in 2D x-z) and the results for hydrostatic and non-hydrostatic
internal wave solutions are compared to the lab experiments of Horn
et al (J. Fluid Mech. 2001) This technical report is the final report
for ONR Young Investigator Program Award Contract N00014-01-1-0574,
and is substantially the dissertation submitted by Dr. Bridget Wadzuk
for her PhD. Citation: Wadzuk, B.M and
B.R. Hodges, Hydrostatic and Non-hydrostatic Internal Wave Models,
CRWR Online Report 04-09, Center for Research in Water Resources,
University of Texas at Austin, (2004), 77 pages, http://www.crwr.utexas.edu/online.html.
<web
abstract> <download
report (3.2 MB PDF)>
Numerical error assessment and a temporal
horizon for internal waves in a hydrostatic model (2005)-
Methods for quantifying basin-wide numerical diffusivity and numerical
viscosity in a closed-basin stratified flow are proposed. It is
demonstrated that a hydrostatic model has a limited temporal horizon
for reasonable representation of internal wave dynamics. Citation:
Hodges, B.R., B. Laval, and B.M. Wadzuk, Numerical
error assessment and a temporal horizon for internal waves in a hydrostatic
model, Ocean
Modelling, 13(1):44-64,doi:10.1016/j.ocemod.2005.09.005. <web
abstract> <pdf
of first page>
Baroclinic stability of two-level semi-implicit
numerical methods for the 3D shallow water equations (2005) -
The TRIM method for baroclinic flows is shown to be unstable
in the inviscid limit for a Crank-Nicolson discretization of
the barotropic term. Theoretical stability for predictor-corrector
methods is examined. Citation: Rueda,
F.J., E. Sanmiguel-Rojas, and B.R. Hodges (2005), “Baroclinic stability of two-level
semi-implicit numerical methods for the 3D shallow water equations,” submitted
to Journal of Computational Physics, (November, 2005). <web
abstract> <pdf of first page not yet available>
A grid-switching strategy for computing
high-frequency, high wave number motions embedded in geophysical
flows (2006) - The effects of altering the model
grid when an internal wave transitions from linear hydrostatic
behavior to nonlinear non-hydrostatic behavior is examined. Citation:
Botelho, D., J. Imberger, C. Dallimore, and B.R. Hodges (2006), “A
grid-switching strategy for computing high-frequency, high
wave number motions embedded in geophysical
flows,” submitted to International Journal for Numerical
Methods in Fluids (February, 2006).<web
abstract> <pdf of first page not yet available>
Hydrostatic and non-hydrostatic modeling
of internal waves (2006) - The capabilities of
both hydrostatic and non-hydrostatic internal wave models using
primitive equations are compared to laboratory experiments.
It is shown that the hydrostatic bore has similar characteristics
to the leading wave of a non-hydrostatic train of solitary
waves, which may provide a basis for subgrid-scale internal
wave closure schemes for hydrostatic models. Citation:
Wadzuk, B.M., and B.R. Hodges (2006), “Hydrostatic and non-hydrostatic
modeling of internal waves,” submitted to Journal of Engineering
Mechanics, (March, 2006). <web
abstract> <pdf of first page not yet available>