Embedding techniques for assessing debris-induced scour within practice
Panici, D; Kripakaran, P; Dentith, K
Date: 15 October 2019
Publisher
University of Exeter
Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Background
In the last decades, scientists, engineers and practitioners have become increasingly aware of the risks
from debris blockage at bridge piers. Large wood is transported in rivers especially during flood events,
in which debris could be entrapped by structures such as bridge piers, and may initiate an
accumulation. ...
INTRODUCTION
Background
In the last decades, scientists, engineers and practitioners have become increasingly aware of the risks
from debris blockage at bridge piers. Large wood is transported in rivers especially during flood events,
in which debris could be entrapped by structures such as bridge piers, and may initiate an
accumulation. The localised acceleration of the flow can substantially exacerbate the scour at the base
of the pier that would normally occur with the pier alone, and consequently the risk of structural
damage or collapse of the structure. Piers that have spread foundations, as most of the UK masonry
bridge stock, are more prone to this problem. It was estimated that in the last century approximately
more than a third of the bridge failures in the UK caused by scour involved the accumulation of woody
debris (Benn, 2013). Similar figures were also observed in the US (Diehl, 1997).
In 2015 the University of Exeter was awarded an EPSRC grant for the project Risk Assessment of
Masonry Bridges Under Flood Conditions: Hydrodynamic Effects of Debris Blockage and Scour, the
primary aim of which was the development of a robust method for estimating the scour depth at a
bridge pier with debris accumulations. This research involved a comprehensive experimental
investigation at the University of Exeter using a large flume. A total of 46 experiments was carried out.
The results from these experiments along with those from others in literature were used to develop a
functional relationship for predicting the maximum scour hole depth at a bridge pier.
To implement the results from the research within the practice of non-academic partners, the
University of Exeter in partnership with Devon County Council (DCC) started a project funded under
an EPSRC Impact Accelerator Account (IAA) award. The IAA award focused specifically on trialling the
methodology on DCC’s assets and using the knowledge to propose amendments to the current scour
assessment practice, as recommended by the Highways England (HE) guidance document BD 97/12.
BD 97/12, in its current form, acknowledges the importance of debris accumulations, but does not
provide a systematic methodology to assess the effects of debris on scour.
This report summarises the findings from the work undertaken as part of the IAA award. In particular,
it summarises the proposed amendments to BD 97/12 and illustrates the impact of these changes on
scour assessment practice via a number of full-scale case studies. [...]
Engineering
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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