Case Studies
2-D SIMULATION OF A SMALL BASINS CONTROLLED DRAINING
Aachen, Germany

Using Tecplot, Paul Kamrath visualizes a reservoir draining over time.
His model estimates the risk of stored toxic sediments mobilizing, reducing
downstream water quality.
The Engineer
Paul Kamrath is a research engineer at the Institute of Hydraulic Engineering
and Water Resources Management (IWW), part of Germany's Aachen University
(RWTH Aachen). Over twenty full-time researchers and fifty student
researchers work at IWW.
IWW consists of five groups:
- Hydraulics and numerical methods for river flow calculations
- Groundwater
modeling
- Risk assessment for dams and hydraulic structure safety
- Sediment
transport processes and water quality simulation for rivers
- Automatic optimization methods
Paul develops numerical methods for river flows and free-surface flow
hydraulics. In addition, he works on methods to determine resistance
parameters in rivers and channels.
His research is funded by government, river and environmental associations,
energy supply corporations, as well as the German Research Foundation.
The Simulation
Reservoirs and lakes have significant influence on water quality. Water
stays in these systems for several months — even years, causing
heavy metals, toxic substances and other fine river sediments to settle
at the bottom. This settling creates better water quality downstream.
Flood events produce higher flow velocities, increasing shear stress
on the reservoir bottom. Shear stresses can erode decades of sediment
build-up and dramatically reduce downstream water quality.
This phenomena makes predicting the influence of sedimentation and erosion
on water quality very important. In response, IWW developed a numerical
River Simulation Model (RISMO) to calculate velocities and shear stresses
at lake and reservoir bottoms.
Using a finite-element method, RISMO solves shallow water equations
obtained by vertical integration of the Navier-Stokes equations, as well
as the continuity equation. A wet-dry algorithm considers overflow and
dry regions. A decoupled transport module calculates transport rates
when flow calculations are completed.
The Plot
The Heimbach reservoir is located approximately 50 kilometers from the
city of Aachen, Germany. Originally built in 1935, it is the smallest
of a number of reservoirs storing drinking water. Approximately 2000
meters by 150 meters, with water depths between 1.5 meters and 6 meters,
the reservoir is more like a river than a lake. Its main purpose is
to balance widely varying outflow from power plants, maintaining adequate
water levels downstream.
In the late 1990s a plan was developed to repair the reservoir's damaged
concrete dam. The basin was emptied in 2001 during restoration work.

Views of the Heimbach reservoir.
Other NAS Projects
Mike is part of a group that developed the AeroDB system, an automated
CFD system running large parameter studies (a collection of computer
jobs with a slightly different input for each job). AeroDB boils down
the testing process of aerospace vehicle design, saving both time and
money.
AeroDB Results
The plot below summarizes the results of several hundred Cart 3D simulations
on the Liquid-Glide-Back-Booster (a conceptual design for a new, reusable
launch vehicle). The plot shows the variation of lift with mach number
and angle of attach. Each sphere in the plot represents one CFD run
and is sized by the number of iterations in the run.

Sediment probe (left) and ADCP measurements (right).
RISMO results are imported directly into Tecplot using an AVS-UCD data
loader built with Tecplot ADK. The main image displays a three-dimensional
view of the reservoir illustrating drainage at different times.
The image was created by:
- Scaling the basin depth by a factor of 10 (since the range is small)
- Projecting the 2-D data to the water surface. This is performed by
using Tecplot's Data Alter (Z-value equal to the water surface)
- Excluding
dry regions with data blanking (If flow depth H is less than or equal
to .02 at any corner, blank entire cell)
- Linking remaining frames using
2-D plotting
- Adding a small frame next to the contour legend with a
rotated view of the boundary
Tecplot
Paul started using Tecplot five years ago. Prior to Tecplot he used AVS — he
switched because he felt Tecplot was more intuitive, making visualization
easier.
Paul's typical Tecplot usage includes:
- Creating contour plots for general overviews of his simulation
- Generating
XY plots for precise information at cross-sections
- Building animations
for unsteady cases (Animations are great for presenting his results
to audiences)
- Placing streamtraces for visualizing large eddies

Flow velocities at a cross section.
For Paul, Tecplot's three greatest strengths are:
- Viewing results on-the-fly
- Quality print output
- User-defined, custom post-processing routines
Paul's Tecplot tips:
- Use Tecplot for any data that needs to be plotted. Whether your data
is measured or simulated, it only needs to be formatted as ASCII-text
to import
- Use Copy Style to File to create large numbers of similar plots
in a short time
- Create a set of standard styles so you can plot your
data in seconds
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