Abstract

Hydrokinetic turbines interact with the dynamics of the sedimentary bottom at small and large scale. Despite the interest that the study of these interactions deserves, little research has been published in the field. In this paper, we investigate by numerical simulation the interaction between modeled hydrokinetic turbines and bed load under clear-water scour conditions. The mixture of water and sediment is accounted for by an Eulerian multiphase model developed in the open source platform OpenFOAM. The turbine blades are parameterized by two models: the Blade Element Method (BEM) and the Actuator Disc Theory (AD). A good agreement with measurements is obtained in the near wake. The effects of the two different turbine models on the bedload sediment transport and on the wake characteristics are then examined. The local impact of the turbine modeled by BEM is more pronounced on the bed than the one modeled by the AD. So, the BEM modeling is preferable to the AD one for local studies of the impact of a turbine on the bed morphology. However, combining BEM with the two-phase fluid-sediment is time consuming and make difficult the use of this method to study a farm of several stream turbines. In such a case the use of AD is still remains recommended for now. Moreover, more studies must be done at real scale as the turbine rotational speed is relatively low and could induced less impact of the swirl on the bottom shear stress.

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