Abstract
The flood discharge atomization of high dams involves a complex coupled flow of water and air. Small-scale model tests are typically used to predict the atomization of flood discharge. However, the accuracy of the prediction results often suffers because of the scale effect between the model and the prototype. Considering that the numerical simulation method has the advantage of not being restricted by similarity scales, this paper studies the influence of the scale effect on the atomization of flood discharge based on the principle of water-air two-phase flow. Taking the Shuibuya Hydropower Station as the research object, the distribution of the flood discharge atomized rainfall and the atomized wind speed are studied when the boundary conditions, ambient atmospheric pressure, and geometric dimensions meet similar requirements. The research results show that under the same boundary conditions, the geometric scale is the most important factor affecting flood discharge atomization. The smaller the geometric scale, the smaller the atomization wind speed and rainfall intensity obtained by the model, which means that smaller monitoring errors lead to larger prediction deviations. When the calculation model satisfies similar atmospheric pressure conditions, the atomization wind speed and rainfall obtained by the models with different geometric scales satisfy the standard exponential function relationship. By comparing with the atomized rainfall and wind speed data observed by the Shuibuya prototype, it is found that the prediction accuracy of the prototype can be greatly improved when the model satisfies a similar atmospheric pressure.
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