3 research outputs found

    Initiation of backward erosion piping in uniform sands

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    The process of backward erosion piping poses a threat to dams and dikes on foundations of nonplastic sands and silts. The available models for design and predictions focus predominantly on the progression of the pipe. However, sand boils in the field will occur as a result of the initiation of sand transport. Although criteria are available for predicting sand boiling and heaving in columns, there is no model describing the initiation of piping in situations where the exit flow is not uniform, as is the case in most backward erosion experiments and situations in the field. This study compared laboratory experiments in which the process of initiation leads directly to failure with analytical and numerical groundwater flow calculations and heave criteria. The aim was to develop a model for the onset of pipe formation. It emerged that the sand bed needs to be fluidised over a distance of at least 20 times the grain diameter from the toe of the structure for a pipe to initiate. The proposed model explains the scale effects of grain size and configuration on a critical gradient. This approach clarifies the processes governing pipe initiation and progression and it can be used to establish a conservative estimate of the critical head in uniform sands, which is essential for laboratory work on this topic and for the appraisal of sand boils in practice
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