Physical models of rock avalanche spreading behaviour with dynamic fragmentation

2012 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 460-476 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.T. Bowman ◽  
W.A. Take ◽  
K.L. Rait ◽  
C. Hann

The dynamic fragmentation of rock during avalanche motion has been postulated as a mechanism explaining the long runout of large rock avalanches or Sturzströme. This paper investigates whether test conditions that produce dynamic fragmentation can lead to greater runout or spreading of physical model rock avalanches. Model avalanche experiments were carried out under enhanced acceleration to generate breakage in coal, a fragmentable, brittle solid. Coal blocks were released from a stationary position on a slope to run out on a plane. The motion of the ensuing fragmenting debris was captured using a high-speed camera placed above the horizontal plane. The average position of the front was tracked and the degree of fragmentation of the model avalanches was quantified. The paper presents results of the frontal velocity of the avalanches, corrected for centrifuge Coriolis effects. Comparison is made between the peak and impulsive front velocities, the final runout, and the degree of fragmentation of the model avalanches. Strong relationships are found between runout normalized by the cube root of volume, impulse velocity, and Hardin’s relative breakage parameter, BR. Results are discussed in light of the mechanics involved and are compared with field-scale events.

Author(s):  
Tim Davies

Rock avalanches are very large (greater than about 1 million m3) landslides from rock slopes, which can travel much farther than smaller events; the larger the avalanche, the greater the travel distance. Rock avalanches first became recognized in Switzerland in the 19th century, when the Elm and Goldau events killed many people a surprisingly long way from the origin of the landslide; these events first posed the “long-runout rock-avalanche” problem. In essence, the several-kilometer-long runout of these events appears to require low friction beneath and within the moving rock mass in order to explain their extremely long deposits, but in spite of intense research in recent decades this phenomenon still lacks a generally accepted explanation. Large collapses of volcano edifices can also generate rock avalanches that travel very long distances, albeit with a different runout–volume relationship to that of non-volcanic events. Even more intriguing is the presence of long-runout deposits not just on land but also beneath the sea and on the surfaces of Mars and the Moon. Numerous studies of rock avalanches have revealed a number of consistencies in deposit and behavioral characteristics: for example, that little or no mixing of material occurs within the moving debris mass during runout; that the deposit material beneath a meter-scale surface layer is pervasively and intensely fragmented, with fragments down to submicrometer size; that many of these fragments are agglomerates of even finer particles; that throughout the travel of a rock avalanche large volumes of fine dust are produced; that rock avalanche surfaces are typically covered by hummocks of a range of sizes; and that, as noted above, runout distance increases with volume. Since rock avalanches can travel tens of kilometers from their source, they pose severe, if low-probability, direct hazards to societal assets in mountain valleys; in addition, they can trigger extensive and long-duration geomorphic hazard cascades. Although large rock avalanches are rare (e.g., in a 10,000 km2 area of the Southern Alps in New Zealand, research showed that events larger than 5 × 107 m3 occurred about once every century), studies to date show that the proportion of total landslide volume involved in such large events is greater than the proportion in smaller, more frequent events, so that a large proportion of the total sediment generated in mountains by uplift and denudation originates in large rock avalanches. Consequently, large rock avalanches exert a significant influence on mountain geomorphology, for example by blocking rivers and forming landslide dams; these either fail, causing large dam-break floods and long-duration aggradation episodes to propagate down river systems, or remain intact to infill with sediment and form large valley flats. Rock avalanches that fall onto glaciers often result in large terminal moraines being formed as debris accumulates at the glacier terminus, and these moraines may have no relation to any climatic change. In addition, misinterpretation of rock avalanche deposits as moraines can cause underestimation of hazard risk and misinterpretation of paleoclimate. Rock avalanche runout behavior poses fundamental scientific questions, and rock avalanches have important effects on a wide range of geomorphic processes, which in turn pose threats to society. Better understanding of these impressive and intriguing events is crucial for both geoscientific progress and for reducing impacts of future disasters.


2015 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-feng Wang ◽  
Qian-gong Cheng ◽  
Qi Zhu

The Wenchuan earthquake, which occurred on 12 May 2008, triggered many rock avalanches that presented abundant fractured surface textures. The surface textures of the rock avalanche clasts bear abundant characteristic signatures that are significant for understanding the mechanical behavior of rock avalanche dynamic fragmentation. To study this mechanism of rock avalanche basal facies further, two large rock avalanches were investigated using microscopic surface texture examination of quartz grains sampled from their basal facies with a scanning electron microscope. After the morphological and statistical analyses of the surface textures on the quartz grains, the following features are noted: (i) surface textures on the quartz grains are all fresh, with obvious irregular shapes and very sharp edges; (ii) the display of brittle fractures, including conchoidal fractures, step fractures, concavities, and V depressions or marks, is very common; (iii) cracks or fissures are also visible on the quartz grains. The display of these features reveals that a brittle fracturing process occurred during the formation of these surface textures on the quartz grains, indicating the existence of a high-stress history suffered by the particles in the basal facies. Hence, by the mechanical analysis of the formation of these surface textures, the authors propose that both the overburden pressure and the self-excited vibration energized by the undulated slip surface may play dominant roles in the occurrence of the particle dynamic fragmentation in the basal facies.


2002 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 789-798 ◽  
Author(s):  
T R Davies ◽  
M J McSaveney

A mass-referenced continuum model for dynamic analysis of rapid mass movement (DAN) is verified by laboratory and field data. Increased earth pressure coefficients are used in this model to represent the dispersive pressures caused by fragmentation within a translating rock avalanche. The numerical model demonstrates that increased runout in large rock avalanches can occur with normal friction coefficients if higher than normal internal pressures, such as those believed to be generated by fragmentation, are present. The extent of the Falling Mountain rock-avalanche deposit in New Zealand is reproduced in the model with normal friction and high earth pressure coefficients to represent by analogy the additional internal pressures due to fragmentation. It appears that if internal friction is changed by fragmentation, it is only by a small amount and may increase rather than decrease. To test this, and to move beyond the present analogue model, requires a better understanding of the rheology of fragmenting rock.Key words: rock avalanches, long runout, fragmentation, simulation model, dispersive stresses, earth pressure coefficients, Falling Mountain.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janusz Wasowski ◽  
Maurice McSaveney ◽  
Luca Pisanu ◽  
Vincenzo Del Gaudio ◽  
Yan Li ◽  
...  

<p>Large earthquake-triggered landslides, in particular rock avalanches, can have catastrophic consequences. However, the recognition of slopes prone to such failures remains difficult, because slope-specific seismic response depends on many factors including local topography, landforms, structure and internal geology. We address these issues by exploring the case of a rock avalanche of >3 million m<sup>3</sup> triggered by the 2008 Mw7.9 Wenchuan earthquake in the Longmen Shan range, China. The failure, denominated Yangjia gully rock avalanche, occurred in Beichuan County (Sichuan Province), one of the areas that suffered the highest shaking intensity and death toll caused by co-seismic landsliding. Even though the Wenchuan earthquake produced tens of large (volume >1 million m<sup>3</sup>) rock avalanches, few studies so far have examined the pre-2008 history of the failed slope or reported on the stratigraphic record of mass-movement deposits exposed along local river courses. The presented case of the Yangjia gully rock avalanche shows the importance of such attempts as they provide information on the recurrence of large slope failures and their associated hazards. Our effort stems from recognition, on 2005 satellite imagery, of topography and morphology indicative of a large, apparently pre-historic slope failure and the associated breached landslide dam, both features closely resembling the forms generated in the catastrophic 2008 earthquake. The follow-up reconstruction recognizes an earlier landslide deposit exhumed from beneath the 2008 Yangjia gully rock avalanche by fluvial erosion since May 2008. We infer a seismic trigger also for the pre-2008 rock avalanche based on the following circumstantial evidence: i) the same source area (valley-facing, terminal portion of a flat-topped, elongated mountain ridge) located within one and a half kilometer of the seismically active Beichuan fault; ii) significant directional amplification of ground vibration, sub-parallel to the failed slope direction, detected via ambient noise measurements on the ridge adjacent to the source area of the 2008 rock avalanche and iii) common depositional and textural features of the two landslide deposits. Then, we show how, through consideration of the broader geomorphic and seismo-tectonic contexts, one can gain insight into the spatial and temporal recurrence of catastrophic slope failures  in Beichuan County and elsewhere in the Longmen Shan. This insight, combined with local-scale geologic and geomorphologic knowledge, may guide selection of suspect slopes for reconnaissance, wide-area ambient noise investigation aimed at discriminating their relative susceptibility to co-seismic catastrophic failures. We indicate the feasibility of such investigations through the example of this study, which uses 3-component velocimeters designed to register low amplitude ground vibration.</p>


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yifan Li ◽  
Yongyong Xiang ◽  
Baisong Pan ◽  
Luojie Shi

Abstract Accurate cutting tool remaining useful life (RUL) prediction is of significance to guarantee the cutting quality and minimize the production cost. Recently, physics-based and data-driven methods have been widely used in the tool RUL prediction. The physics-based approaches may not accurately describe the time-varying wear process due to a lack of knowledge for underlying physics and simplifications involved in physical models, while the data-driven methods may be easily affected by the quantity and quality of data. To overcome the drawbacks of these two approaches, a hybrid prognostics framework considering tool wear state is developed to achieve an accurate prediction. Firstly, the mapping relationship between the sensor signal and tool wear is established by support vector regression (SVR). Then, the tool wear statuses are recognized by support vector machine (SVM) and the results are put into a Bayesian framework as prior information. Thirdly, based on the constructed Bayesian framework, parameters of the tool wear model are updated iteratively by the sliding time window and particle filter algorithm. Finally, the tool wear state space and RUL can be predicted accordingly using the updating tool wear model. The validity of the proposed method is demonstrated by a high-speed machine tool experiment. The results show that the presented approach can effectively reduce the uncertainty of tool wear state estimation and improve the accuracy of RUL prediction.


1999 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 1096-1110 ◽  
Author(s):  
T R Davies ◽  
M J McSaveney ◽  
K A Hodgson

Based on the observation that deposits of large rock avalanches consist predominantly of intensely fragmented rock debris, it is proposed that the processes of rock fragmentation are significant causes of the peculiar distribution of mass in these deposits, and of the correspondingly long runout. Rock fragmentation produces high-velocity fragments moving in all directions, resulting in an isotropic dispersive stress within the translating rock mass. A longitudinal dispersive force consequently acts in the direction of reducing mass depth and tends to cause the rear part of the avalanche to decelerate and halt and the front part to accelerate. The result is greater longitudinal spreading of the travelling mass compared with nonfragmenting granular avalanches. The longer runout results from this additional fragmentation-induced spreading.


2018 ◽  
Vol 183 ◽  
pp. 02034 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jia Zhang ◽  
Yuxuan Zheng ◽  
Fenghua Zhou ◽  
Jun Liu

Expanding ring experiment is an important method for dynamic fragmentation of solid under 1D tensile loading. Based on the split Hokinson pressure bar (SHPB), a liquid-driving experimental technology was developed for conducting expanding ring tests. The loading fixture includes a hydraulic cylinder filled with water, which is pushed by a piston connected to the input bar. As the water is driven, it expands the metallic ring specimen in the radial direction. The approximately incompressible property of the water makes it possible to drive the specimen in very high radial velocity by low velocity movement of piston, according to the large sectional area ratio of the cylinder to specimen. Using liquid-driving expanding ring device, 1060 aluminum rings (ductile materials)/PMMA rings (brittle materials) were fragmented and the fragments were recovered. Impact deformation of free-flying fragments was avoided through the use of “sample soft-capture” technology. The fragmentation process was observable by high speed camera through modifying the driving direction of the water. From the observations of the fracture morphology and the residual internal cracks of the recovered fragments, it is concluded that the fracture of the rings is caused by the circumferential tensile stress.


Insects ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 446
Author(s):  
Robin Wootton

The nature, occurrence, morphological basis and functions of insect wing deformation in flight are reviewed. The importance of relief in supporting the wing is stressed, and three types are recognized, namely corrugation, an M-shaped section and camber, all of which need to be overcome if wings are to bend usefully in the morphological upstroke. How this is achieved, and how bending, torsion and change in profile are mechanically interrelated, are explored by means of simple physical models which reflect situations that are visible in high speed photographs and films. The shapes of lines of transverse flexion are shown to reflect the timing and roles of bending, and their orientation is shown to determine the extent of the torsional component of the deformation process. Some configurations prove to allow two stable conditions, others to be monostable. The possibility of active remote control of wing rigidity by the thoracic musculature is considered, but the extent of this remains uncertain.


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