Publication: Mechanism of Steady and Unsteady Piping in Coastal and Hydraulic Structures with a Sloped Face
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MDPI AG
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Abstract
Coastal and hydraulic structures, such as revetments, embankments and levees—as well as their underlying soil—may experience piping when exposed to outward pressure gradients. The aim of the present study is twofold: (1) to derive the force-balance equation for soils with a sloping surface exposed to a steady hydraulic gradient (relevant to hydraulic structures) and to seek a criterion for piping, including the friction terms; (2) to study the case of unsteady hydraulic gradient forcing (relevant to coastal structures) by means of a series of experiments. The derived force-balance equation is compared with the available experimental and numerical model data from the literature and extended to soils protected by a filter/armour layer or rip rap. The experiments conducted to study the mechanism of piping under unsteady hydraulic gradients involved two types of loadings; sudden and oscillatory. The results show that although the mechanism of steady and unsteady piping has some similar aspects, the soil is generally more prone to piping in the unsteady hydraulic loading compared to the steady case, attributed to the inertia terms. The hydraulic conductivity of the soil becomes more distinctive for the unsteady piping case. Finally, remarks are made about practical applications.
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Dam Behaviour Modelling, Piping, Inertia, Hydraulic conductivity, piping, Soil Mechanics in Geotechnical Engineering Practice, Seismic Design and Analysis of Underground Structures, Hydraulics, FOS: Mechanical engineering, unsteady pressure gradient, Mechanics, Oceanography, filter layer, Engineering, revetment, Soil water, Current (fluid), Classical mechanics, levee, Civil and Structural Engineering, Piping Phenomena, Soil science, Physics, Hydraulic Gradients, Deformation Measurement, Geology, FOS: Earth and related environmental sciences, Mechanical engineering, Geotechnical engineering, Aerospace engineering, Physical Sciences, oscillatory hydraulic slope, Levee, sloped structures, Statistics and Mechanisms of Embankment Dam Failures, Hydraulic head