An intermediate water gravity wavelength and wave height measurement inside a large wave flume tank

Main Article Content

Safa Mohammad Aldarabseh
Parviz Merati, Professor

Abstract

This paper discusses an intermediate water gravity wavelength and wave height measurement method. Three methods were used to obtain wave height, wavelength, and period. Firstly, conventional methods used two Honeywell pressure sensors mounted at the bottom of the wave tank at two different locations. Secondly, using the transfer function of the flap wavemaker (the relationship between wave height and the wave paddle stroke). Thirdly, the Laser Sheet technique (PIV image processing technique). The significant wave height and period from pressure reading sensors of regular gravity waves were obtained from the Raleigh distribution and Zero up crossing technique. Wavelength was obtained indirectly by using a dispersion relationship that was solved by using the Newton Raphson numerical method from both the pressure sensors and the transfer function of the flap wavemaker. This experiment was focused on getting the direct value of wave measurements by developing an image processing technique in a clear large wave flume tank to replace the conventional methods and eliminate the error that may produce by using the numerical methods. The PIV setup with the CCD camera was used to capture wave images. The image processing technique based on Canny edge detection with constant threshold value was used to detect the edge of the waves. The experimental result showed a good agreement between the results obtained from these three methods, with the percent of error up to 8.683%.

Article Details

How to Cite
Aldarabseh, S. M., & Merati, P. (2023). An intermediate water gravity wavelength and wave height measurement inside a large wave flume tank. Journal of Applied Research and Technology, 21(3), 407–423. https://doi.org/10.22201/icat.24486736e.2023.21.3.1757
Section
Articles
Author Biography

Parviz Merati, Professor, Western Michigan University

Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department

Full Professor