Scaling and design of landslide and debris-flow experiments

被引:301
作者
Iverson, Richard M. [1 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Vancouver, WA 98683 USA
关键词
Landslide; Debris flow; Experiment; Scaling; Dimensional analysis; Normalization; 3-DIMENSIONAL TERRAIN; PRESSURE; MOTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.geomorph.2015.02.033
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Scaling plays a crucial role in designing experiments aimed at understanding the behavior of landslides, debris flows, and other geomorphic phenomena involving grain-fluid mixtures. Scaling can be addressed by using dimensional analysis or - more rigorously - by normalizing differential equations that describe the evolving dynamics of the system. Both of these approaches show that, relative to full-scale natural events, miniaturized landslides and debris flows exhibit disproportionately large effects of viscous shear resistance and cohesion as well as disproportionately small effects of excess pore-fluid pressure that is generated by debris dilation or contraction. This behavioral divergence grows in proportion to H-3, where H is the thickness of a moving mass. Therefore, to maximize geomorphological relevance, experiments with wet landslides and debris flows must be conducted at the largest feasible scales. Another important consideration is that, unlike stream flows, landslides and debris flows accelerate from statically balanced initial states. Thus, no characteristic macroscopic velocity exists to guide experiment scaling and design. On the other:hand, macroscopic gravity-driven motion of landslides and debris flows evolves over a characteristic time scale (L/g)(1/2), where g is the magnitude of gravitational acceleration and L is the characteristic length of the moving mass. Grain-scale stress generation within the mass occurs on a shorter time scale, H/(gL)(1/2), which is inversely proportional to the depth-averaged material shear rate. A separation of these two time scales exists if the criterion H/L < < 1 is satisfied, as is commonly the case. This time scale separation indicates that steady-state experiments can be used to study some details of landslide and debris-flow behavior but cannot be used to study macroscopic landslide or debris-flow dynamics. Published by Elsevier B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:9 / 20
页数:12
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