Multi-lab investigation of the effect of debris composition on bridge clogging during floods

Lisa Burghardt*, Daan W. Poppema, Loïc Benet, Davide Wüthrich, Sébastien Erpicum, Elena Maria Klopries

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference proceedings/Edited volumeConference contributionScientificpeer-review

4 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

During the European flood of 2021, large debris accumulations were observed at numerous bridges, causing backwater rise, increased upstream flooding, and extended damage. To date, debris accumulation studies mainly focused on debris consisting of logs, at bridge piers or debris racks. However, during the 2021 flood, debris contained a large share of man-made materials in various shapes, often reaching the bridge deck and railing. Therefore, flume experiments on debris accumulation at bridges were conducted at three laboratories in Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands. Hereby, we investigated how backwater rise depends on flow conditions and on debris composition – using debris mixtures of 75% logs with either 25% cubes or 25% plates. Results showed that mixtures with plates caused 1.8 – 2.9 times more backwater rise than those with cubes. This means that previous studies on natural log accumulations may substantially underestimate backwater rise at debris accumulations with e.g. building rubble during flood events. Almost no backwater rise occurred below approximately Fr = 0.2, after which backwater rise increased with the Froude number. Comparison of results between labs agreed relatively well, with backwater rise under the same conditions varying often by 10% to 35%. However, the results of a single series of experiments were higher by up to a factor 2.5. This implies that any multi-flume or multi-lab study should ensure sufficient overlap between test conditions, rather than a pure workload split. Moreover, the observed inter-lab variability implies that multi-lab setups can increase confidence for the generalization of test results to real-world conclusions.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Hydraulic Structures (ISHS 2024)
EditorsRobert Boes, Ismail Albayrak, Stefan Felder, Brian Crookston, Valentin Heller
Place of PublicationZurich
PublisherETH Zürich
Pages791-800
Number of pages10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024
Event10th International Symposium on Hydraulic Structures (ISHS 2024) - ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Duration: 17 Jun 202419 Jun 2024
https://ishs2024.ethz.ch/

Conference

Conference10th International Symposium on Hydraulic Structures (ISHS 2024)
Abbreviated titleISHS2024
Country/TerritorySwitzerland
CityZurich
Period17/06/2419/06/24
Internet address

Keywords

  • Flood events
  • Bridge designs
  • Backwater rise
  • Flume experiments

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Multi-lab investigation of the effect of debris composition on bridge clogging during floods'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this