Laboratory study of the enhanced wave-induced drift of large rectangular floating objects

Q. Xiao*, M.L. McAllister, T.A.A. Adcock, T.S. van den Bremer

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Surface gravity waves induce a drift on objects floating on the water's surface. This study presents laboratory experiments investigating the drift of large two-dimensional floating objects on deep-water, unidirectional, regular waves, with wave steepness ranging from 0.04 to 0.31 (0.04 0.31, where is the wavenumber and the wave amplitude). The objects were carefully designed to have a rectangular cross-section with a constant aspect ratio; their size varied from 2.6 to 27 of the incident wavelength. We observed Lagrangian behaviour for small objects. Small and large objects exhibited fundamentally different drift behaviour at high compared with low wave steepness, with a regime shift observed at a certain size and wave steepness. The scaling of object drift with steepness depends on the relative size of the object. For small objects, drift scales with steepness squared, whereas drift becomes a linear function of steepness as the object size increases. For objects that are relatively large but smaller than 13-16% of a wavelength (low to high steepness), we provide experimental evidence supporting the mechanisms of drift enhancement recently identified by Xiao et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 980, 2024, p. A27) and termed the 'diffraction-modified Stokes drift'. This enhanced drift behaviour, compared with the theoretical Stokes drift for infinitely small fluid parcels, is attributed to changes in the objects' oscillatory motion and local wave amplitude distribution (standing wave pattern) due to the presence of the object. In the case of larger objects, similar to Harms (J. Waterw. Port Coast. Ocean Eng., vol. 113(6), 1987, pp. 606-622), we relate the critical size at which drift is maximised to their vertical bobbing motion. We determine the domain of validity for both Stokes drift and the diffraction-modified Stokes drift model of Xiao et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 980, 2024, A27) in terms of relative size and wave steepness and propose an empirical parametrisation based on our experimental data.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA18
Number of pages36
JournalJournal of Fluid Mechanics
Volume1008
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • surface gravity waves
  • wave-structure interactions

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Laboratory study of the enhanced wave-induced drift of large rectangular floating objects'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this