Upscaling of the porous shallow water equations through the use of periodic homogenization
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Abstract
Due to the large and costly nature of ocean models, they are often limited in computational resolution - meaning accurate solvers must take into account boundary geometry at the subgrid-scale without explicitly modelling it. One method of characterizing subgrid-scale features is Brinkman penalization, where the solid/fluid interface is modelled as a porous medium, which yields many stability, accuracy, and efficiency benefits. In this work, we aim to extend the Brinkman method by testing a penalization that accounts for a position dependent tensorial permeability which will allow the model to experience friction in a directionally dependent fashion - implicitly preserving roughness that may be lost in a porosity-only approach. We simulate flow through solid/fluid and semi-permeable permeability-defined substructure configurations using the porous shallow water equations at both the subgrid-scale as well as the coarsened scale. Our findings indicate that coarsened simulations well approximate averaged fine-scale simulations in both velocity distribution and total kinetic energy. We coarsen subgrid-scale permeability using the periodic homogenization approach, which we find to be rigorous, fast, and accurate.