1. Introduction
The interaction of a solitary wave with a three-dimensional (3-D) submerged horizontal plate in a channel was recently investigated experimentally by Wang et al. (Reference Wang, Liu, Fang and Dias2020) and numerically by Geng, Liu & Dias (Reference Geng, Liu and Dias2021). It was shown that when the wave approaches or leaves the plate, the channel flow underneath the plate contributes to the positive peaks of the vertical force. As the wave crest approaches the centre of the plate, the negative force caused by the dynamic pressure on the upper surface of the plate dominates. Here we consider again the propagation of waves above a submerged horizontal plate in a channel but from the point of view of wave scattering. The incoming waves are nonlinear periodic waves. The problem of wave scattering by a submerged plate has been widely studied. In the framework of linear potential wave theory, the method of matched asymptotic expansions was applied by Siew & Hurley (Reference Siew and Hurley1977) to give the first-order reflection and transmission coefficients for the scattering of long waves by a submerged plate. Patarapanich (Reference Patarapanich1984) studied numerically forces and moments exerted on the plate by using a finite element method and then compared the results with those of Siew and Hurley. Patarapanich & Cheong (Reference Patarapanich and Cheong1989) conducted experiments and reported optimal conditions for the submerged horizontal plate to minimize the wave transmission. The method of eigenfunction expansion was used by Liu & Iskandarani (Reference Liu and Iskandarani1991) to study short-wave scattering by a submerged plate. This method was extended by Cheong, Shankar & Nallayarasu (Reference Cheong, Shankar and Nallayarasu1996) to the complete range of water depths. Dong et al. (Reference Dong, Wang, Zhao and Liu2018) further modified the method to allow for a varying bathymetry. Another approach to study the problem is to use an integral equation method. Parsons & Martin (Reference Parsons and Martin1992) investigated the variation of the reflection coefficient as a function of the angle of inclination of the plate by using hypersingular integral equations.
The study of nonlinear effects is relatively scarce. Kojima, Yoshida & Nakamura (Reference Kojima, Yoshida and Nakamura1994) reported nonlinear wave forces exerted on a submerged horizontal plate to the second order. Brossard & Chagdali (Reference Brossard and Chagdali2001) presented an experimental study of higher harmonics induced by a submerged plate. Two moving wave probes were used to separate the reflected waves from the incident waves. Liu, Huang & Tan (Reference Liu, Huang and Tan2009) developed a desingularized boundary element method (BEM) to study the nonlinear wave scattering by a submerged thin plate. Higher harmonics were extracted and compared with experimental results from Brossard & Chagdali (Reference Brossard and Chagdali2001). Simulations based on the Navier–Stokes equations can also be found. Pinon et al. (Reference Pinon, Perret, Cao, Poupardin, Brossard and Rivoalen2017) used a two-dimensional (2-D) Lagrangian vortex method to study the velocity and vorticity field around the plate. The numerical work was the continuation of the experimental study by Poupardin et al. (Reference Poupardin, Perret, Pinon, Bourneton, Rivoalen and Brossard2017).
For the 3-D case, several methods have been used to study wave scattering by a submerged circular disk due to the simplicity of its shape. Yu & Chwang (Reference Yu and Chwang1993) proposed a theoretical solution to the problem using an eigenfunction expansion approach. They investigated the phenomenon of wave focusing behind the plate. Farina & Martin (Reference Farina and Martin1998) studied this problem in deep water and reduced it to a hypersingular integral equation over the surface of the disc. They discussed the relationship between the scattering cross-section and the added mass. Both cases are restricted to open-sea conditions and a circular shape. However, when the structures are located inside a harbour or some naturally formed confined offshore area, the scattered waves are reflected by the lateral walls and interact with the incoming waves. In the present paper, we describe a series of experiments that were conducted in the Tsunami Basin for Offshore Regions (Wang, Fang & Liu Reference Wang, Fang and Liu2018) to better understand how the lateral walls on both sides of the channel affect the wave field. A thorough investigation of wave scattering by a 3-D submerged rectangular plate is performed. Numerical simulations, which use a parallelized fully nonlinear BEM, are performed to compare and further explore the phenomena observed in the experiments. Both the experiments and the numerical simulations are novel.
The main objective of this paper is to investigate the loads on the submerged horizontal plate. The layout of the paper is as follows. In § 2, we review the experiments. The numerical method is then briefly described in § 3. Section 4 provides comparisons of the numerical results with the experimental results for the free-surface elevation, the forces and the moments. A parametric study is performed. Conclusions and a discussion of our results are presented in § 5.
2. Description of the experiments
The experiments were conducted in the Tsunami Basin for Offshore Regions in Shanghai Jiao Tong University. A detailed description of the set-up is provided by Wang et al. (Reference Wang, Liu, Fang and Dias2020). Even though Wang et al. (Reference Wang, Liu, Fang and Dias2020) focus on solitary waves, the experimental set-up is the same. In the experiments, each case is repeated three times. The maximum relative error is less than $5\,\%$. The standard deviation is from $1\,\%$ to $2.6\,\%$. In general, the smaller the wave amplitude, the larger the statistical error probably caused by electrical noise. The wave flume is 42 m long and 4 m wide with a piston-type wavemaker installed at one end. The plate-type structure is made of organic glass. It is 200 cm long, 78 cm wide, 10 cm thick and mounted on the bottom in the middle region of the flume (see figure 1). Four piezoelectric force balance units are installed inside the plate. A dynamometric system is used to measure wave loads on the structure. The constant water depth is denoted by $h$.
The free-surface elevation is measured by resistance-type wave gauges (WGs). Twenty WGs are spread around the plate; their exact locations and labels are shown in figure 2. Taking the centre of the plate as the origin $(0,0)$ of the horizontal $(x,y)$-plane, we list the $(x,y)$-coordinates of all the WGs in table 1.
We use the classical wavemaker theory for plane waves produced by a piston-type wavemaker; it is explained, for example, by Dean & Dalrymple (Reference Dean and Dalrymple1991). Time is denoted by $t$. The wave produced by the wavemaker propagates along the positive $x$-direction. To obtain a periodic wave elevation $\eta (x,t)$ with wave height $H$, wavenumber $k$ and angular frequency $\omega$ (or period $T=2{\rm \pi} /\omega$), that behaves like
far away from the wavemaker, the horizontal displacement $s(t)$ of the wavemaker must be defined by
where $S$ is the stroke of the wavemaker.
The ratio of wave height to stroke is given by
where the wavenumber $k$ satisfies the dispersion relation
3. Numerical method
Numerical models of 3-D potential flow wave propagation can be divided into three main categories: (i) BEMs; (ii) finite element methods; (iii) spectral methods. Methods (i) and (iii) reduce the water wave problem from one posed inside the entire fluid domain to one posed on the boundary alone, thus reducing the dimension of the formulation. These approaches are summarized for example in Grilli et al. (Reference Grilli, Dias, Guyenne, Fochesato and Enet2010). The present study uses a boundary element numerical wave tank (known as NWT) code, which has already been used by Geng et al. (Reference Geng, Liu and Dias2021). The code uses a BEM to compute field variables. The 16-node quadrilateral elements provide global third-order precision. Since the numerical wave tank was fully explained in Geng et al. (Reference Geng, Liu and Dias2021), we only provide a summary of the main features (see also Grilli et al. Reference Grilli, Guyenne and Dias2001).
3.1. Mathematical formulation
The computational domain is shown in figure 3. The velocity potential $\phi (\boldsymbol {x},t)$ is used to represent the 3-D flow, which is assumed to be inviscid and irrotational. Here $\boldsymbol {x} = (x,y,z)$ denotes a point inside the fluid domain, with $z$ the vertical coordinate. The continuity equation in the fluid domain is the 3-D Laplace's equation for $\phi$, i.e.
Green's second identity transforms Laplace's equation (3.1) into an integral equation on the boundary,
where $\boldsymbol {x}$ and $\boldsymbol {x}_l$ are the coordinates of points on the boundary, $G$ is the 3-D free space Green's function $G(\boldsymbol {x},\boldsymbol {x}_l)={1}/{4{\rm \pi} r}$ and $({\partial G}/{\partial n})(\boldsymbol {x},\boldsymbol {x}_l)=-({1}/{4{\rm \pi} })({\boldsymbol {r} \boldsymbol {\cdot } \boldsymbol {n}}/{r^3})$, $\partial /\partial n$ is the normal derivative with the normal vector pointing out of the domain and $\alpha (\boldsymbol {x}_l)$ is proportional to the exterior solid angle made by the boundary at the collocation point $\boldsymbol {x}_l$. The boundary $\varGamma$ consists of the free surface, the flat bottom, the six sides of the submerged horizontal plate, the wavemaker and the end of the wave tank.
At a point $\boldsymbol {x}$ on the free surface, $\phi$ satisfies the nonlinear kinematic and dynamic boundary conditions, written in a mixed Eulerian–Lagrangian form, with the material derivative ${\rm D}/{\rm D}t \equiv \partial /\partial t + \boldsymbol {\nabla }\phi \boldsymbol {\cdot } \boldsymbol {\nabla }$, as follows:
where g is the acceleration due to gravity. At the wavemaker moving with velocity $\boldsymbol {U}$, the normal velocity is continuous over the surface of the wavemaker,
At the bottom and other fixed parts of the boundary, the no-flow condition $\partial \phi / \partial n=0$ is prescribed.
3.2. Time integration
Second-order explicit Taylor series expansions are used to express both the new position and potential on the free surface. First-order coefficients are given by the boundary conditions (3.3) and (3.4). The pairs $\partial \phi / \partial t, \partial ^2 \phi /\partial t \partial n$ are computed by solving another integral equation similar to (3.2). For the evaluation of the tangential derivatives, a fourth-order interpolation scheme is employed.
The time step is adapted by finding the minimum distance between two nodes on the free surface. In order to maintain the stability when strong nonlinear free-surface deformations occur, an equally spaced regridding method is adopted every 10 time steps, starting when the first wavefront arrives at the leading edge of the plate.
3.3. Spatial discretization
The boundary is discretized into N collocation nodes and M high-order elements are used to interpolate in-between q of these nodes. Within each element, the boundary geometry and the field variables are discretized using polynomial shape functions. We choose cubic reference elements $(q=16)$, which provides $C_2$ continuity in-between elements.
The integral equation (3.2) is transformed into a sum of integrals over the boundary elements, each one being calculated on the reference element. The associated discretized boundary integral equation leads to a sum on the N boundary nodes,
where $l=1,\ldots,N$. Here $K_{lj}^D$ and $K_{lj}^N$ are Dirichlet and Neumann global matrices, respectively.
In terms of the intersecting parts of different boundaries, such as between the free surface and the lateral boundary, boundary conditions and normal directions are generally different. Therefore, double nodes are used to represent these corners and the continuity of the potential is imposed.
3.4. Convergence
A convergence test is conducted using meshes with three different resolutions. Table 2 shows the number of nodes on the free surface. A comparison of the results is shown in figure 4. It can be seen that the numerical results obtained using mesh 2 are close to those from mesh 3 but slightly deviate from those obtained using mesh 1. Therefore, mesh 2 is considered to be sufficient to reach a convergent solution in our model.
3.5. Wave generation
For the numerical wave generation, a simple exponential ramp function is applied on the horizontal displacement $s(t)$ provided by (2.2) to make the generation smooth. A similar method can be found in Yan & Ma (Reference Yan and Ma2007) and Liam, Adytia & van Groesen (Reference Liam, Adytia and van Groesen2014),
where $\beta$ is a constant that was adapted for the various periods we considered.
How the wavemaker is ramped exactly in the experiment is unknown. Therefore, a slight deviation between the numerical and experimental results is expected at the beginning.
4. Results
As shown in figure 1, $G$ is the depth of submergence and $B$ is the distance from the bottom to the lower surface of the plate. Two different water depths ($h=50$ and 60 cm) and three depths of submergence ($G=20$, 30 and 40 cm) were used in the laboratory experiments. For each combination of $h$ and $B$, three different ratios of wave height to water depth were investigated. Finally, for each ratio, five different wave periods ($T=1.2$, 1.4, 1.6, 1.8 and 2.0 s) were tested. The combinations are summarized in table 3.
The set of experiments contained both non-breaking and breaking cases. The list of non-breaking cases is provided in table 4. Since the boundary integral equation method cannot handle broken waves, the comparison with experiments involving broken waves is left for future work. Note that in some cases that are borderline between breaking and non-breaking, the numerical simulations led to wave breaking while no wave breaking was observed during the experiments.
4.1. Surface elevation
In this section, the free-surface elevation at selected WGs, normalized by the wave height $H$, is compared with experimental measurements. The numerical and experimental results are synchronized using the data of WG3, which is located on the middle line upstream of the plate. When WGs are symmetrically located, like WG2 and WG4, the results of only one WG are shown below. In fact, these WGs were used to check the symmetry of the measurements.
Figure 5 shows comparisons between experimental and numerical results in the case $B=20$ cm, $h=50$ cm, $H/h=0.1$ at six selected WGs (five of them, WG3, 7, 11, 15, 19, are along the $x$-axis, which coincides with the centreline of the plate; WG13 is off one of the downstream edges of the plate) for three different wave periods (1.2 s, 1.6 s, 2 s). Figure 6 is the same as figure 5, except that $B=30$ cm, $h=60$ cm, $H/h=0.2$. Unfortunately the physical wavemaker software package that includes the algorithm used to generate the regular waves is a ‘black box’. Even though the time ramp used in the experiments to gradually generate the waves is different from the algorithm used in the numerical simulations, the overall agreement is uniformly good. It can been seen that the wave amplitudes are not always constant. For example, in figure 5, the free-surface elevation at WG11 decreases as a function of time for $T=1.2$ s while it increases for $T=2$ s. The wave amplitude also increases at WG7 for $T=1.2$ s. The free-surface elevations at WG3 and WG7 for $T=2$ s even decrease first before increasing again. At WG19 for $T=1.2$ s, the wave amplitude first increases and then plateaus at a constant value. These changing wave amplitudes are the result of the interaction between the reflected scattered waves from the lateral walls and the incoming wave. The varying wave field above the plate has a great influence on the hydrodynamic loads on the plate, especially the vertical force.
Due to shoaling, the wave amplitude at WG11, which is the only WG located above the plate, is normally the largest and can be as large as two to three times the incoming wave amplitude depending on the depth of submergence. However, in the middle column of figure 6 that corresponds to $T=1.6$ s, the wave amplitudes at WGs 15 and 19 are even larger than that at WG11. This phenomenon depends on the ratio of the wave length to the length of the plate.
In figure 6, at WG19 for $T=2$ s, one observes nonlinearities that are typical of reflected waves interacting with the incoming wave. There is a strong crest/trough asymmetry at WG11 for $T=1.2$ s. The largest discrepancy between experiments and simulations occurs at WG11 when $T=2$ s (see the box in the plot on the third line and third column of figure 6). The experimental values plateau while the numerical values keep increasing. The numerical values are the largest of all our simulations. The large amplitudes are due to 3-D effects leading to waves developing into jets that often characterize wave breaking in crossing seas. The topic of 3-D wave breaking has been recently revisited by McAllister et al. (Reference McAllister, Draycott, Adcock, Taylor and van den Bremer2019), who showed experimentally the formation of upward projected jets that do not limit wave crest height under crossing-sea conditions. Longuet-Higgins & Dommermuth (Reference Longuet-Higgins and Dommermuth2001a,Reference Longuet-Higgins and Dommermuthb) also studied numerically the breaking of standing waves and the consequent formation of jets.
4.2. Horizontal force, vertical force and moment
The nonlinear hydrodynamic loads are calculated by integrating the pressure distribution along the structure's surface,
where $\boldsymbol {F}$ and $\boldsymbol {M}$ are the hydrodynamic force and moment, respectively, $\boldsymbol {x}$ is the vector of coordinates from the centre of the plate.
To obtain the pressure distribution on the structure, Bernoulli's equation is used:
As anticipated because of the symmetries involved in the experiments and reproduced in the numerical simulations, it was checked that the lateral force $F_y$, the yaw moment $M_z$ and the roll moment $M_x$ are negligible. Therefore, this section presents the comparisons of the horizontal force $F_x$, the vertical force $F_z$ and the (pitching) moment $M_y$ between the numerical and the experimental results. The overall agreement is satisfactory except for the horizontal force $F_x$ in the case when the wave period is $T=1.2$ s and for the vertical force $F_z$ when $T=2$ s. Examples for $B=20$ cm, $h=50$ cm, $H/h=0.1$ and $B=30$ cm, $h=60$ cm, $H/h=0.2$ are shown in the top row of figure 7 ($T=1.2$ s). We also show results for $T=1.6$ s and $T=2$ s in figures 8 and 9. We selected some other cases where poor agreement was obtained. In figure 10, the horizontal force in the experiment is much larger than the numerical force at the beginning. The reason why this is happening eludes us. A typical WG measurement is shown as well. It can been seen that the free-surface elevation at this particular WG (and in fact at all WGs – not shown in the figure) is small at the beginning.
The vertical force shows several different patterns, for example increasing in figure 11(a,c), and fluctuating like a wave group in figure 11(b,d). Since the pattern is not periodic, the maxima of the vertical forces cannot be defined, as opposed to the case of solitary waves, as shown in Geng et al. (Reference Geng, Liu and Dias2021).
Unlike the vertical force, the time history of the pitching moment shows a consistent periodicity. Since the plate is relatively thin, the pressure distributions on the upper and lower faces are the key contributors to the moment. Compared with the variable behaviours that we highlighted for the vertical force, we can conjecture that the pressures also fluctuate along both sides of the plate but that the way they are distributed somehow maintains unchanged the magnitude of the moment.
4.3. Description of the hydrodynamic loading process
We choose the case $B=30$ cm, $h=60$ cm, $H/h=0.1$, $T=1.8$ s (see figure 12) to analyse the basic hydrodynamic loading process and how the reflected scattered waves alter the wave field. Selected time points are marked A, B, C, D, E and F. Figure 13 shows a sequence of numerical results at these key times of the loading process within one wave period.
The first column in figure 13 shows the pressure distribution in the middle line of the plate's upper and lower faces. If we define the upper surface pressure as $P_{upper}$ and the lower surface pressure as $P_{lower}$, their difference is defined as $P_{lower}-P_{upper}$. The vertical force and pitching moment can be calculated from the following expressions:
where $S$ denotes the surface area of the plate.
The loading process starts with the wave crest reaching the leading edge of the plate. The previous wave cycle leaves a hollow on the free surface and a low pressure area covering almost half of the trailing edge side of the plate, which leads to the maximum vertical force. As the wave propagates, it focuses above the plate and alters the upper surface pressure distribution, leading to the minimum moment and the zero-crossing point for the vertical force subsequently. When the centre of the focused wave is moving close to the centre of the plate, the pressure distribution is balanced on both sides, which yields the zero-crossing point for the moment. Wave focusing continues and leads to an increase of the upper surface pressure even further, giving the minimum vertical force. In the end, the focused wave reaches its peak near the trailing edge and is ready to decrease and leave the plate.
By analysing the basic loading process, it can be seen that the ratio of the wavelength to the plate length is a key parameter. Different ratios mean different relative positions of the focused wave above the plate, which has a great impact on the moment exerted on the plate.
To analyse how the lateral walls change the hydrodynamic load on the plate, we mark with letters I to VI several times of interest in figure 14. The pressure distribution along the plate at times corresponding to points I and VI is presented in figure 15. It can be seen that from the time corresponding to point I to the time corresponding to point VI the pressures on both surfaces increase together but their differences decrease. However, the change of the pressure difference is almost symmetrically distributed along the plate. Combining these two effects explains why the amplitude of the vertical force decreases while the magnitude of the moment remains unchanged.
4.4. Parametric study
Since the results in the previous sections showed an overall good agreement between experimental and numerical results, we now investigate the effects of different parameters on the hydrodynamic loading process. One of the key parameters is the ratio between the wavelength and the width of the channel defined by
where $\lambda '$ is the wavelength, $b'$ is the width of the channel and $\lambda$ is the non-dimensional wavelength. As shown by Renzi & Dias (Reference Renzi and Dias2012), the hydrodynamic behaviour varies at special values of $\lambda$, i.e. $\lambda =1,1/2,1/3,\ldots$, which are known as the cutoff wavelengths of the transverse sloshing modes in a channel (see, for example, Shemer, Kit & Miloh Reference Shemer, Kit and Miloh1986). The sloshing modes are transverse standing waves bouncing back and forth between the lateral walls. They have a wave length $\lambda '_m$ related to the channel width $b'$, satisfying $m\lambda '_m/2=b'$. Due to the symmetry of our problem, we only have the even sloshing modes. The first two even modes are plotted in figure 16. In the following discussion, the width of the channel $b'$ is fixed as 4 m and the water depth is set to be 60 cm. The wavelengths of the first two sloshing modes are $\lambda _2'=4$ and $\lambda _4'=2$ m. Their corresponding wave periods are 1.8653 and 1.1582 s. To demonstrate that the frequency of the first sloshing mode is not related to the incoming wave, we show in figure 17 the spectrum of the wave elevation at WG11 when the wave period is 1.4 s. As can be seen, the frequency of the first sloshing mode, around 0.536 Hz ($T=1.8653$ s), is captured apart from the main frequency of the incoming wave.
To understand how the sloshing modes affect the hydrodynamic behaviour at these cutoff wavelengths, two representative cases are investigated: $\lambda =1$ and $\lambda =1/2$ when $B=30$ cm, $h=60$ cm and $H/h=0.1$.
Figure 18 shows the free-surface elevations around the plate when $\lambda =1/2$. It can be seen that wave focusing above the plate is intensified and the wave amplitude at WG13 is compressed. A physical interpretation is that the transverse sloshing mode when $m=4$ shares the same frequency as that of the propagating wave while its phase coincides, so that when the standing wave reaches its peak in the middle line, the propagating wave also reaches its crest. When this sloshing mode reaches its crest in the centre, it has a trough at one quarter of the channel and cancels the crest of the incoming wave. Because WG13 is located close to that point, it explains why the free-surface elevation at WG13 is compressed. To illustrate the effects of this transverse sloshing mode more clearly, we plot the elevations at additional numerical WGs that correspond to the nodes and antinodes of the standing wave (see figure 19 and table 5). It can be seen that the wave amplitude of these five numerical WGs follows the standing wave pattern, which also demonstrates the resonance between the incoming wave and the transverse sloshing mode.
Figures 20 and 21 show the free-surface elevations around the plate when $\lambda =1$. The resonant behaviour present in the case $\lambda =1/2$ is no longer present. This is due to the phase difference between the sloshing mode when $m=2$ and the incoming wave, even though these two components have the same frequency. The phase difference between the sloshing mode and the incoming wave is determined by the speed of the scattered wave travelling to the lateral walls and the distance between the plate and lateral walls. The hydrodynamic loads when $\lambda =1/2$ and $\lambda =1$ are plotted in figure 22. Due to the resonance, the vertical force increases abruptly at some point when $\lambda =1/2$.
As shown in figure 23, the interaction between the sloshing modes and the incoming wave always occurs on the downstream side of the plate. Since in these two cases the length of the plate is fixed at 2 m, it is possible that this complex interaction will have little effect on the hydrodynamic loads in the case of a wavelength of 4 m ($\lambda =1$). To illustrate this, two more numerical experiments are conducted. We fix both the length of the plate and the wavelength at 4 m. The other parameters remain unchanged except that the widths of the channel are set at 4 and 8 m. The vertical forces exerted on the plate are shown in figure 24. When the width of the channel is equal to 4 m, we see from the vertical force that at the beginning the sloshing mode is not established yet. Then it gradually develops and starts to change the hydrodynamic load completely. In this case $\lambda =1$, the only parameter that changes is the length of the plate from 2–4 m. It is yet more evidence that the complex interaction happens on the downstream side. By increasing the length of the plate, we enable the interaction to have a great impact on the hydrodynamic load on the plate.
Comparing the hydrodynamic loads in two different channel widths in figure 24, we find that the vertical force amplitude when the channel width is equal to 4 m is almost double the one when the width is equal to 8 m. One can imagine that when the width of the channel is equal to the width of the plate, the problem becomes purely 2-D. On the other hand, when the width of the channel goes to infinity, the problem tends to that of open-sea conditions.
5. Discussion and conclusion
Wave scattering by a 3-D submerged horizontal plate in a channel was investigated both experimentally and numerically. While several studies of the 2-D problem can be found in the literature, the 3-D problem has been essentially untouched. It is clear that the flow and the loads differ in the 3-D context. For the 3-D problem, the pressure distribution on the lower surface is very sensitive to the phase difference between the sloshing mode generated by the presence of the plate and the incoming wave. This phase difference is determined by the speed of the scattered wave travelling to the lateral walls and the distance between the plate and lateral walls. Numerical results show that the pressure distribution differs from the linear distribution from the leading edge to the trailing edge that can be revealed from the 2-D problem (Lo & Liu Reference Lo and Liu2014). Additionally, a local hump and a pit appear near the crest and the trough of the waves, respectively, propagating over the submerged plate of finite span.
The agreement between experiments and simulations was found to be good overall, even if some discrepancies were observed. Because of that, we were also able to consider numerically more cases than were considered experimentally. In particular, we studied the effect of the channel width. It is important to understand this effect since submerged plates can be found either in the open ocean or inside harbours and naturally formed confined offshore areas. Resonances can occur, leading to modified loads on the plate. It is clear that care should be taken when employing the results obtained in a wave tank to predict the loading of the plate in the open ocean. The same comment was made by Renzi & Dias (Reference Renzi and Dias2013) in their study of wave energy converters, and in particular of oscillating wave surge converters having the shape of a plate. In ocean engineering, wave scattering by offshore structures under open-sea conditions is usually studied experimentally in a wide tank. The scattered wave field is absorbed by active absorption wavemakers at all boundaries. The wave generation process continues until a steady state is reached. However, in the experiments presented here, the scattered wave field is reflected by the lateral walls to investigate channel effects rather than being absorbed. The reflected wave field keeps propagating both upstream and downstream and eventually changes the characteristics of the incoming regular waves. Therefore, the experimental method used in wide tanks cannot be applied in our case.
In the present framework of a submerged horizontal plate, we were also able to study the effect of the thickness of the plate in a companion paper by Geng et al. (Reference Geng, Liu and Dias2021) that was restricted to solitary waves. Since the effect was found to be weak, it was not considered in the present paper. The other effect that was not considered in the present paper is the effect of wave breaking. Indeed, the potential flow solver that we used does not allow us to simulate cases where the incoming wave breaks when it hits the plate. A CFD solver should then be used. This is left for future work.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to acknowledge the DJEI/DES/SFI/HEA Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC) for the provision of computational resources.
Funding
This work was funded by the China Scholarship Council (T.G.), by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant nos. 11632012 and 41861144024) (H.L.) and by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement no. 833125-HIGHWAVE) (F.D.).
Declaration of interests
The authors report no conflict of interest.