In this work, Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) is assessed for the modelling of flow past bridges. An improved pressure extrapolation method and a no-slip extension for the widely used modified Dynamic Boundary Condition (mDBC) are presented. The no-slip condition is validated with benchmark test cases of Poiseuille flow and flow past a cylinder. The ability to simulate river flows past bridges is assessed by comparing with experimental measurements for two model bridges with multiple discharges. The results are also evaluated against numerical results from 2D Shallow Water Equation (SWE) simulations, which is the leading approach for this kind of flow. While both methods shows good agreement with the experimental data away from the bridge, the SWE assumptions fail in the immediate vicinity of the bridge. In this region, the SPH method demonstrates higher accuracy, captures additional flow features and offers deeper insight into local hydraulic behaviour. A new SPH restart procedure has been developed that enables high-resolution simulations to be initialized using results from lower-resolution simulations. This greatly reduces simulation run times for large and complex transient flow such as rivers. Advanced DualSPHysics boundary generation and pre-processing tools allow for easier creation of boundaries through STL files, and GPU acceleration on the latest hardware allow for faster simulation with larger domains. With all these features, the first full-scale SPH simulation of a real river flow past a bridge is presented, including the riverbed bathymetry and model of Ponte Vecchio on the Arno River (Italy).
Smoothed particle hydrodynamics modelling of river flows past bridges / English, A.; Vacondio, R.; Dazzi, S.; Domínguez, J. M.. - In: COMPUTERS & FLUIDS. - ISSN 0045-7930. - 303:(2025). [10.1016/j.compfluid.2025.106870]
Smoothed particle hydrodynamics modelling of river flows past bridges
English A.
;Vacondio R.;Dazzi S.;
2025-01-01
Abstract
In this work, Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) is assessed for the modelling of flow past bridges. An improved pressure extrapolation method and a no-slip extension for the widely used modified Dynamic Boundary Condition (mDBC) are presented. The no-slip condition is validated with benchmark test cases of Poiseuille flow and flow past a cylinder. The ability to simulate river flows past bridges is assessed by comparing with experimental measurements for two model bridges with multiple discharges. The results are also evaluated against numerical results from 2D Shallow Water Equation (SWE) simulations, which is the leading approach for this kind of flow. While both methods shows good agreement with the experimental data away from the bridge, the SWE assumptions fail in the immediate vicinity of the bridge. In this region, the SPH method demonstrates higher accuracy, captures additional flow features and offers deeper insight into local hydraulic behaviour. A new SPH restart procedure has been developed that enables high-resolution simulations to be initialized using results from lower-resolution simulations. This greatly reduces simulation run times for large and complex transient flow such as rivers. Advanced DualSPHysics boundary generation and pre-processing tools allow for easier creation of boundaries through STL files, and GPU acceleration on the latest hardware allow for faster simulation with larger domains. With all these features, the first full-scale SPH simulation of a real river flow past a bridge is presented, including the riverbed bathymetry and model of Ponte Vecchio on the Arno River (Italy).I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


