TY - JOUR
T1 - Experimental investigation of debris damming loads under transient supercritical flow conditions
AU - Stolle, Jacob
AU - Takabatake, Tomoyuki
AU - Nistor, Ioan
AU - Mikami, Takahito
AU - Nishizaki, Shinsaku
AU - Hamano, Go
AU - Ishii, Hidenori
AU - Shibayama, Tomoya
AU - Goseberg, Nils
AU - Petriu, Emil
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are acknowledging the support of the NSERC CGS-D Scholarship (Jacob Stolle), of the NSERC Discovery Grant (No. 210282 ) (Ioan Nistor), the Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Program (No. 622214 ) (Nils Goseberg), and the Strategic Research Foundation Grant-aided Project for Private Universities from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (No. S1311028 ) (Tomoya Shibayama). The authors would also like to acknowledge the help of the Waseda University technical staff in the design and implementation of the experimental setup, in particular Mr. Kazuhiro Yamanashi, Mr. Kiyoji Egawa, and Mr. Akihiro Kagami.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2018/9
Y1 - 2018/9
N2 - Debris loading during extreme flooding events has been documented by many post-tsunami field surveys of disaster-stricken communities and, as such, it is now considered and accounted for as a critical design consideration in the design of resilient infrastructure. Debris damming is one of the debris loads of concern, occurring when solid objects entrained within the inundating flow accumulate at the face of a structure or structural element. The presence of the debris dam results in increased drag loads on the structure and can have other associated effects, such as flow runup and flow accelerations, that can influence design conditions. The focus of debris damming studies has been within river engineering: therefore, previous studies have been performed in steady-state conditions. The study presented here is the first to examine debris damming in transient, supercritical flow conditions. The study uses a modified dam-break wave as the hydrodynamic forcing condition and the debris are scaled down debris types common in coastal areas (shipping containers, hydro poles, and boards). The analysis includes a qualitative examination of the difference in the debris damming mechanisms as a result of distinct flow conditions associated with a dam-break wave interacting with a surface-piercing obstacle. Additionally, the study determined the influence of the debris dam resulted in a maximum loading condition that occurred earlier and was of greater magnitude than the clear water case.
AB - Debris loading during extreme flooding events has been documented by many post-tsunami field surveys of disaster-stricken communities and, as such, it is now considered and accounted for as a critical design consideration in the design of resilient infrastructure. Debris damming is one of the debris loads of concern, occurring when solid objects entrained within the inundating flow accumulate at the face of a structure or structural element. The presence of the debris dam results in increased drag loads on the structure and can have other associated effects, such as flow runup and flow accelerations, that can influence design conditions. The focus of debris damming studies has been within river engineering: therefore, previous studies have been performed in steady-state conditions. The study presented here is the first to examine debris damming in transient, supercritical flow conditions. The study uses a modified dam-break wave as the hydrodynamic forcing condition and the debris are scaled down debris types common in coastal areas (shipping containers, hydro poles, and boards). The analysis includes a qualitative examination of the difference in the debris damming mechanisms as a result of distinct flow conditions associated with a dam-break wave interacting with a surface-piercing obstacle. Additionally, the study determined the influence of the debris dam resulted in a maximum loading condition that occurred earlier and was of greater magnitude than the clear water case.
KW - Coastal engineering
KW - Debris
KW - Debris damming
KW - Extreme forces
KW - Natural disasters
KW - Tsunami
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U2 - 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2018.04.026
DO - 10.1016/j.coastaleng.2018.04.026
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85047055423
SN - 0378-3839
VL - 139
SP - 16
EP - 31
JO - Coastal Engineering
JF - Coastal Engineering
ER -