Authors
Marco Ghisalberti, Heidi Nepf
Publication date
2009/6
Journal
Transport in Porous Media
Volume
78
Issue
2
Pages
309-326
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
Aquatic flow over a submerged vegetation canopy is a ubiquitous example of flow adjacent to a permeable medium. Aquatic canopy flows, however, have two important distinguishing features. Firstly, submerged vegetation typically grows in shallow regions. Consequently, the roughness sublayer, the region where the drag length scale of the canopy is dynamically important, can often encompass the entire flow depth. In such shallow flows, vortices generated by the inflectional velocity profile are the dominant mixing mechanism. Vertical transport across the canopy–water interface occurs over a narrow frequency range centered around f v (the frequency of vortex passage), with the vortices responsible for more than three-quarters of the interfacial flux. Secondly, submerged canopies are typically flexible, coupling the motion of the fluid and canopy. Importantly, flexible …
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