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Experimental and numerical investigation of the stability of overhanging riverbanks

Experimental and numerical investigation of the stability of overhanging riverbanks
Experimental and numerical investigation of the stability of overhanging riverbanks
Although different types of riverbank mass failure have been studied by many researchers, many uncertainties remain in predicting cantilever failures, in part because of a lack of detailed observations of this type of bank collapse. In this study, a laboratory study of cantilever failure was carried out using two types of materials to form overhanging banks with three different densities. The laboratory results show that the occurrence of toppling failures is more probable than the simple shear–type mechanism that has been analyzed most frequently by prior researchers. We go on to model these toppling failures numerically. Specifically, a Mohr-Coulomb model, within the framework of SIGMA/W software (ver. 7.17), was used to simulate the stress–strain behavior of the experimental banks. The numerical results for loess materials are in good agreement with the laboratory observations, but the simulations do not replicate experimental failures observed in higher density, more cohesive soils
0169-555X
1-19
Samadi, A.
cf1ee159-112e-4a4f-8b84-492c50cdaf0e
Amiri-Tokaldany, E.
c9b59da5-81e5-4a5b-8a83-83a3c3bf480d
Davoudi, M.H.
d5d26548-bc2f-4780-8384-11a9d2abf6d4
Darby, Stephen E.
4c3e1c76-d404-4ff3-86f8-84e42fbb7970
Samadi, A.
cf1ee159-112e-4a4f-8b84-492c50cdaf0e
Amiri-Tokaldany, E.
c9b59da5-81e5-4a5b-8a83-83a3c3bf480d
Davoudi, M.H.
d5d26548-bc2f-4780-8384-11a9d2abf6d4
Darby, Stephen E.
4c3e1c76-d404-4ff3-86f8-84e42fbb7970

Samadi, A., Amiri-Tokaldany, E., Davoudi, M.H. and Darby, Stephen E. (2013) Experimental and numerical investigation of the stability of overhanging riverbanks. Geomorphology, 184, 1-19. (doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2012.03.033).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Although different types of riverbank mass failure have been studied by many researchers, many uncertainties remain in predicting cantilever failures, in part because of a lack of detailed observations of this type of bank collapse. In this study, a laboratory study of cantilever failure was carried out using two types of materials to form overhanging banks with three different densities. The laboratory results show that the occurrence of toppling failures is more probable than the simple shear–type mechanism that has been analyzed most frequently by prior researchers. We go on to model these toppling failures numerically. Specifically, a Mohr-Coulomb model, within the framework of SIGMA/W software (ver. 7.17), was used to simulate the stress–strain behavior of the experimental banks. The numerical results for loess materials are in good agreement with the laboratory observations, but the simulations do not replicate experimental failures observed in higher density, more cohesive soils

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Published date: 2013
Organisations: Earth Surface Dynamics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 336920
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/336920
ISSN: 0169-555X
PURE UUID: 8adc0764-965f-401c-af5d-08c9cb6f2fbe
ORCID for Stephen E. Darby: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8778-4394

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Date deposited: 11 Apr 2012 13:49
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:58

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Contributors

Author: A. Samadi
Author: E. Amiri-Tokaldany
Author: M.H. Davoudi

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