Flood propagation modeling with the Local Inertia Approximation: Theoretical and numerical analysis of its physical limitations
Luca Cozzolino
1
,
Luigi Cimorelli
2
,
Renata Della Morte
1
,
Giovanni Pugliano
1
,
V Piscopo
3
,
Domenico Pianese
2
1
Dept. of Engrg., Parthenope Univ., Centro Direzionale di Napoli, Is. C4, 80143 Napoli, Italy.
|
2
Dept. of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engrg., Federico II Univ., via Claudio 21, 80125 Napoli, Italy
|
3
Dept. of Sci. and Tech., Parthenope Univ., Centro Direzionale di Napoli – Is. C4, 80143 Napoli, Italy
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2019-11-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 1.038
CiteScore: 7.8
Impact factor: 4.2
ISSN: 03091708, 18729657
Water Science and Technology
Abstract
Attention of the researchers has increased towards a simplification of the complete Shallow water Equations called the Local Inertia Approximation (LInA), which is obtained by neglecting the advection term in the momentum conservation equation. In the present paper it is demonstrated that a shock is always developed at moving wetting-drying frontiers, and this justifies the study of the Riemann problem on even and uneven beds. In particular, the general exact solution for the Riemann problem on horizontal frictionless bed is given, together with the exact solution of the non-breaking wave propagating on horizontal bed with friction, while some example solution is given for the Riemann problem on discontinuous bed. From this analysis, it follows that drying of the wet bed is forbidden in the LInA model, and that there are initial conditions for which the Riemann problem has no solution on smoothly varying bed. In addition, propagation of the flood on discontinuous sloping bed is impossible if the bed drops height have the same order of magnitude of the moving-frontier shock height. Finally, it is found that the conservation of the mechanical energy is violated. It is evident that all these findings pose a severe limit to the application of the model. The numerical analysis has proven that LInA numerical models may produce numerical solutions, which are unreliable because of mere algorithmic nature, also in the case that the LInA mathematical solutions do not exist. The applicability limits of the LInA model are discouragingly severe, even if the bed elevation varies continuously. More important, the non-existence of the LInA solution in the case of discontinuous topography and the non-existence of receding fronts radically question the viability of the LInA model in realistic cases. It is evident that classic SWE models should be preferred in the majority of the practical applications.
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Cozzolino L. et al. Flood propagation modeling with the Local Inertia Approximation: Theoretical and numerical analysis of its physical limitations // Advances in Water Resources. 2019. Vol. 133. p. 103422.
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Cozzolino L., Cimorelli L., Morte R. D., Pugliano G., Piscopo V., Pianese D. Flood propagation modeling with the Local Inertia Approximation: Theoretical and numerical analysis of its physical limitations // Advances in Water Resources. 2019. Vol. 133. p. 103422.
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.advwatres.2019.103422
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.advwatres.2019.103422
TI - Flood propagation modeling with the Local Inertia Approximation: Theoretical and numerical analysis of its physical limitations
T2 - Advances in Water Resources
AU - Cozzolino, Luca
AU - Cimorelli, Luigi
AU - Morte, Renata Della
AU - Pugliano, Giovanni
AU - Piscopo, V
AU - Pianese, Domenico
PY - 2019
DA - 2019/11/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 103422
VL - 133
SN - 0309-1708
SN - 1872-9657
ER -
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@article{2019_Cozzolino,
author = {Luca Cozzolino and Luigi Cimorelli and Renata Della Morte and Giovanni Pugliano and V Piscopo and Domenico Pianese},
title = {Flood propagation modeling with the Local Inertia Approximation: Theoretical and numerical analysis of its physical limitations},
journal = {Advances in Water Resources},
year = {2019},
volume = {133},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {nov},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.advwatres.2019.103422},
pages = {103422},
doi = {10.1016/j.advwatres.2019.103422}
}