GenCade: Difference between revisions

From CIRPwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 147: Line 147:


The Seaward BC tab includes the Input wave adjustments and other options. The input wave adjustments include height amplification factor, angle amplification factor, and angle offset. The other options include wave components to apply and number of cells in offshore contour smoothing window (ISMOOTH). Similar to K1 and K2, the value of ISMOOTH needs to be adjusted through a sensitivity analysis. Although 11 is the default for ISMOOTH, there is no recommended value. ISMOOTH needs to be large enough so that the local shoreline undulations are not reflected back on the shape of the offshore contour. Using an ISMOOTH value about 2-3 time the length of the detached breakwaters or about twice the between groins in a groin system is a good place to start.
The Seaward BC tab includes the Input wave adjustments and other options. The input wave adjustments include height amplification factor, angle amplification factor, and angle offset. The other options include wave components to apply and number of cells in offshore contour smoothing window (ISMOOTH). Similar to K1 and K2, the value of ISMOOTH needs to be adjusted through a sensitivity analysis. Although 11 is the default for ISMOOTH, there is no recommended value. ISMOOTH needs to be large enough so that the local shoreline undulations are not reflected back on the shape of the offshore contour. Using an ISMOOTH value about 2-3 time the length of the detached breakwaters or about twice the between groins in a groin system is a good place to start.
Left and right lateral boundary conditions can be specified under the Lateral BC tab. Presently, GenCade has three boundary conditions available: pinned, moving, and gated. As of 21 October, only the pinned boundary condition is available in the SMS interface. The GenCade model has been updated to include moving and gated boundary conditions, so a user could modify the *.gen file to include a moving or gated boundary. Moving and gated boundary conditions will be included in the interface by the end of October 2010.

Revision as of 13:36, 21 October 2010

GenCade

POCs: Ashley Frey <br\>Ashley.E.Frey@usace.army.mil <br\>601-634-2006 <br\>US Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) <br\>Coastal and Hydraulics Lab (CHL)

<br\>Nick Kraus <br\>Nicholas.C.Kraus@usace.army.mil <br\>601-634-2016 <br\>US Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) <br\>Coastal and Hydraulics Lab (CHL)


GenCade is a 1D model that combines GENESIS with Cascade. It is operated within the Surface-water Modeling System (SMS) interface. The first open release of GenCade is expected to occur in December 2010. A user guide, examples of simple cases, and applications will be posted here.

User Guide

Getting Started

This GenCade guide was developed in September 2010. Most of the screenshots used in this guide were created with the July 29, 2010, build of the SMS. The August 25, 2010, build was used to create the screenshots for the Developing Alternatives and Time-dependent Wave Transmission sections. This guide refers to GenCade_v1_066.exe as the most recent executable. Developers are constantly upgrading the SMS and GenCade executables, so a future version may look slightly different from this user guide.

Setup GenCade in the SMS

GenCade is one model available in the SMS (Surface-water Modeling System) interface. To use GenCade, a working version of SMS 10.1 and executable for SMS 11.0 Development are necessary. The SMS 11.0 Development executable is copyrighted, so a registration code is necessary before using.

First, locate the GenCade executable on your machine. Drop the executable into the models folder under SMS 10.1 as shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1. Models folder in SMS 10.1


Once again, the capabilities of GenCade are only available in SMS 11.0 Development. If SMS 10.1 is already installed on the computer and a registration code for SMS 11.0 Development has been obtained, simply drag the SMS 11.0 executable into the SMS 10.1 folder (most likely in Program Files). Double-click on the SMS 11.0 executable to open SMS 11.0 Development. At this time, a prompt will open asking for the registration code. Before beginning to work in GenCade, go to Edit->Preferences. Select the tab File Locations and scroll down to GenCade under Model Executables. Click the button under Executable located directly to the right of GenCade. If GenCade has not been used previously, the button will most likely say BROWSE. After selecting this button, find the latest GenCade executable on the computer and select. The row to the right will specify the location of the executable which will be used to run GenCade (Figure 2).

Figure 2. Specify GenCade executable


Set the current projection

GenCade uses a real world coordinate system, so it is necessary to set up the current projection upon opening the SMS. Aerial photos, shorelines, and other georeferenced files can be opened in the SMS. Go to Edit->Projection and define the current projection (Figure 3). This will ensure all shorelines, structures, wave gages, and other important features are mapped correctly.

Figure 3. Specify current projection


Reproject current projection

In some cases, the shorelines and the aerial photo may be in different coordinate systems. To change the projection, go to Edit->Reproject. A new window will open where the current projection and new projection can be specified (Figure 4).

Figure 4. Reproject


Preparing Input Files

Initial shoreline

Before dragging a file into the SMS interface, right click on default coverage under Map Data in the left panel. Select Type->Models->GenCade. To bring in a shoreline or regional contour as a *.cst, the original text file must be modified. See Figure 5 for the required format. The first number in the third row represents the number of points in the file. The other numbers in the first three rows will remain the same.

Figure 5. Define coverage as GenCade and format shoreline as *.cst


Once the shoreline is represented in the interface, click the Select Feature Arc button and double-click on the shoreline. The GenCade Arc Attributes will open. Select Initial Shoreline and click OK (Figure 6). Now the shoreline is defined.

Figure 6. Define as shoreline


Regional contour or additional shorelines

In some cases, it may be necessary to include a regional contour or additional shorelines. Right-click on Map Data and select New Coverage. A window will open; scroll down and select GenCade as the coverage type (Figure 7). Open the regional contour in the interface, and click on the Select Feature Arc button. After double-clicking on the regional contour, select Regional Contour as the Arc Option in the GenCade Arc Attributes window (Figure 8). Additional shorelines can be added in a similar fashion.

Figure 7. Define new coverage as GenCade


Figure 8. Define as regional contour


Merge coverages

After the initial shoreline and regional contour have been loaded and defined in the SMS interface, it is necessary to merge the two lines in a single coverage. All structures, inlets, wave gages, and other features will be created in this single coverage. Highlight both the default coverage (initial shoreline) and the new coverage (regional contour). Right-click and select Merge Coverages (Figure 9). A window will open asking "Do you want to delete the coverages used to make the merged coverage?" By selecting no, the initial shoreline and regional contour will remain in the interface and if a problem occurs, these coverages can be merged again. It may be necessary to redefine the shoreline and regional contour in this new coverage.

Figure 9. Merge coverages


Grid Setup

Orientation and cell size

After merging the shoreline and regional contour into one coverage, the grid can be setup. If the user knows the what length grid to use, it is advisable to do this before adding any features to coverage. To manually draw the grid frame, click on the Create 2-D Grid Frame. The GenCade grid frame will be purple and have an arrow at one end. If a person was walking down the grid to the arrow, the water would be to the left and the land would be to the right. For example, if the GenCade grid arrow was pointing south, the water would be to the east (left) and the land would be to the west (right). The grid can be modified by clicking the Select 1-D Grid Frame and double-clicking on the square in the center of the purple grid line. The Grid Frame Properties window will open, and the Origin X, Origin Y, Angle, and I size can be modified (Figure 10). The I size is the length of the grid. The cell size can be constant or variable. If the user chooses to change the cell size under define cell sizes, the number of cells will change accordingly.

Figure 10. Grid frame properties


Inlets, shoals, jetties, and dredging

To create an inlet, select the Create Feature Arc button and draw a line from one side of the inlet to the other (Figure 11). This is why it is helpful to have a high quality aerial in the background. Once the inlet is drawn, click on the Select Feature Arc button and double-click on the line representing the inlet. The GenCade Arc Attributes window will open. Select Inlet and click on Attributes. This will open the Inlet Reservoir Model window. The inlet can be named, shoal volumes defined, and dredging added. Click on the Volume button to add the initial and equilibrium shoal volumes for the ebb, flood, left bypass, left attachment, right bypass, and right attachment. Similarly, in the dredging window, the user can define the beginning date, the ending date, the volume, and the shoal to be mined (Figure 12). After clicking OK, the line representing the inlet will turn blue.

Figure 11. Create an inlet


Figure 12. Define inlet properties


A jetty can be drawn at the inlet after selecting the Create Feature Arc button. After drawing the jetty, click on the Select Feature Arc and double-click on the line representing the jetty. When the GenCade Arc Attributes window opens, select either Left Jetty on Inlet or Right Jetty on Inlet (remember the left jetty is to the left of a person standing on land) and click on Attributes. A new window will open where user can choose the permeability, select diffracting or non-diffracting, and include a seaward depth (Figure 13). The line representing a jetty will also turn blue.

Figure 13. Define jetty properties


Beach fills

Beach fills can be drawn in the same way as inlets. Select the Create Feature Arc button to draw the beach fill. Beach fills can be drawn directly on the shoreline or slightly offshore. If there are many beach fills in one location during the simulation, each beach fill should be placed slightly offshore so they do not overlap. After each beach fill is drawn, click on the Select Feature Arc and double-click on the line representing the beach fill. Select the Beach Fill Event after the GenCade Arc Attributes window opens. For each beach fill, add the starting and end dates and the added berm width (Figure 14). After selecting OK in the GenCade Arc Attributes window, the line representing the beach fill will turn green.

Figure 14. Define beach fill properties


Groins

Once the location for a groin is chosen, select the Create Feature Arc button. In most cases, the arc representing the groin will cross the regional contour and initial shoreline. Do not draw either end of the groin near the regional contour or initial shoreline. When this occurs, the node from the groin will connect to the initial shoreline or regional contour. This will divide the regional contour or initial shoreline into two separate arcs, where only one of the arc will be considered the regional contour or initial shoreline. At this point, GenCade does not have the capability to identify multiple arcs for the initial shoreline or regional contour. The best way to prevent this (at this time) is to save often, reopen the project, and start at the step previously saved. After drawing the feature arc for the groin, click on the Select Feature Arc button. The GenCade Arc Attributes window will open. Select groin in the Arc Options menu and click on Attributes. The window for groins includes the permeability and seaward depth (in the user specified units). The user may also decide "Diffracting" or "Non-diffracting" for the groin.

Figure 15. Define groin properties


Wave Data

There are several ways to represent wave gages in the conceptual model. If the coordinates for the wave gages are in the same coordinate system as the conceptual model, it is very easy to bring in the location of the gages. Drag the file with the coordinates representing the wave gages into the SMS interface. The Open File Format window will open. Select Use Import Wizard and click OK. Follow the direction for the File Import Wizard and select OK. The wave gage locations will be represented as scatter data. Simply select the Create Feature Point button in the conceptual model and draw a feature point directly on top of each point. Now the wave gage locations are represented in the model.

If the coordinates for the wave gages are in a different coordinate system than the GenCade conceptual model, the process to bring in the locations representing the gages is slightly different. Go to Single Point Projection under the Edit menu. The Reproject Single Point window will open. In the Convert from window, choose the projection of the wave gage. In the Convert to window, specify the projection of the GenCade conceptual model. At the bottom of the window, enter the coordinates of the wave gage and check create feature point. Once the window is closed, the location of the wave gage will become a feature point in the GenCade conceptual model. This process will need to be repeated for each wave gage.

Figure 16. Reproject single point for wave gage


Once the wave gages are represented in the conceptual model as feature points, click on the Select Feature Point button and double click on the point representing the wave gage. In the Refine Point window, check wave gage and click on options. The wave gages window will open and the user can specify the depth of the wave gage. After clicking Data, the Wave Events window will open. There are four columns in this window: Date (month, day, year, and time), Ho (the wave height is always in meters), Period (in seconds), and Direction (in degrees). The direction is shore (grid) normal. In most cases, the user will need to convert to grid normal outside of the SMS interface. It is expected that the ability to input wave data in meteorological, oceanographic, or local coordinates will added to the SMS interface during this FY.

Figure 17. Add wave gage information


For the SMS to read the wave information correctly, the information must be copied and pasted in a specific format. The easiest way to do this is to bring the wave information into Microsoft Excel. The first column will include the month, day, year, and time. The date must be in the format of 1/1/1997 0:00. The wave height, period, and direction are included in the proper column. An example of this format is shown in Figure 18. Before copying the wave information to GenCade in the SMS interface, the user must clean the information. Since the waves are read in as shore (grid) normal, the wave direction must be between -90 and +90 degrees. If wave direction is coming from shore in the raw wave data, it is necessary to make the wave height and direction zero for GenCade.

Figure 18. Sample setup for wave information


Convert to 1-D Grid

Once all of the inlets, structures, beach fills, wave gages, etc. have been added to the conceptual model, go to the merged coverage (location where all arcs were added), right click on the name, click on convert, and select Map->1D Grid. A window will open which show the origin and orientation of the GenCade grid and the different cell options. This is the same window used when manually drawing and modifying the grid frame. In many cases, a constant cell size will be sufficient to give reasonable results. Either the cell size or number of cells can be changed. The other blank will change based on the total length of the grid (I size). The default cell size is 10 ft, but a cell size of at least 15 to 20 feet is suggested to reduce instabilities. In other cases where one specific region of the GenCade grid need more refinement, variable grid resolution is available.

Figure 20. Convert to 1D grid window


GenCade Files, Menu, Model Setup, and Execution

GenCade Input Files

There are several input files necessary to run GenCade. These will be created once saves the GenCade project. The *.gen is the control file. This file records all of the information for structures, inlets, beach fills, boundary conditions, wave gages, and model setup. While this file can be opened, it is recommended that the user not make any changes directly to the *.gen file. The *.shi and *.shr are in the same format. The *.shi represents the initial shoreline (initial shoreline distance from the baseline at each cell). The *.shr gives the distance from the baseline to the regional contour. If a regional contour was not created, this file will not exist. The *.wave files include all of the wave information. There will be one *.wave file for each wave gage.

GenCade Menu

After the user converts to the 1-D grid, the GenCade menu will appear (between Data and Web in the menu). This menu can be used to make minor changes to the project. An example of a minor change to make in GenCade is modifying the cells representing left and right bypassing under the Edit Inlets menu. If the user is calibrating the model, it is best to return to the conceptual model to make changes. Changes made in the conceptual model can be applied to multiple projects, changes made to the grid itself cannot.

Model Control

Model Control for GenCade is located under the GenCade menu. After clicking Model Control, a window will open with four tabs: Model Setup, Beach Setup, Seaward BC, and Lateral BC.

The simulation name and computational time is located under the Model Setup tab. The title of the simulation can be changed from SMS Simulation. Also, the start date, end date, time step, and recording time step can be specified.

Sand and Beach Data and Longshore Sand Transport Calibration Coefficients are included in the Beach Setup tab. The Sand and Beach Data includes the effective grain size, average berm height and closure depth. K1 (primary calibration coefficient) and K2 (secondary calibration coefficient) are the longshore sand transport calibration coefficients. The K2 term is only active when there are strong wave height gradients. In most cases, K2 should be greater than K1. However, a sensitivity analysis for K1 and K2 should be conducted.

The Seaward BC tab includes the Input wave adjustments and other options. The input wave adjustments include height amplification factor, angle amplification factor, and angle offset. The other options include wave components to apply and number of cells in offshore contour smoothing window (ISMOOTH). Similar to K1 and K2, the value of ISMOOTH needs to be adjusted through a sensitivity analysis. Although 11 is the default for ISMOOTH, there is no recommended value. ISMOOTH needs to be large enough so that the local shoreline undulations are not reflected back on the shape of the offshore contour. Using an ISMOOTH value about 2-3 time the length of the detached breakwaters or about twice the between groins in a groin system is a good place to start.

Left and right lateral boundary conditions can be specified under the Lateral BC tab. Presently, GenCade has three boundary conditions available: pinned, moving, and gated. As of 21 October, only the pinned boundary condition is available in the SMS interface. The GenCade model has been updated to include moving and gated boundary conditions, so a user could modify the *.gen file to include a moving or gated boundary. Moving and gated boundary conditions will be included in the interface by the end of October 2010.