Interpretation of local scouring at bridge piers and abutments with the phenomenological theory of turbulence
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Coscarella, Francesco
Furgiuele, Franco
Gaudio, Roberto
Manes, Costantino
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Dottorato di Ricerca in Ingegneria Civile e Industriale. Ciclo XXXI; The phenomenological theory of turbulence is here applied to the scouring
phenomenon at bridge piers and abutments. In the last ve decades many
researches have been devoted to the development of predictive formulae able
to quantify the maximum scour depth for both design and risk assessment
needs of hydraulic structures. Owing to the complexity of the problem, most
of the proposed formulae were developed on an empirical basis, which made
them susceptible to scale issues and not fully consistent with the physics
underpinning the scouring phenomenon. Recently, some studies of Gioia &
Bombardelli (2005), Bombardelli & Gioia (2006), Manes & Brocchini (2015)
and Ali & Dey (2018) have proposed a di erent approach, which exploits a
theory to derive scaling relations between the equilibrium scour depth and
non-dimensional parameters. Their work presented the phenomenological
theory of turbulence and the paradigms of the sediment incipient motion
theory assuming rough ow conditions, meaning that the momentum transport
near the sediment-water interface was dominated by eddies belonging
to the turbulent energy spectrum inertial range and scaling with the sediment
diameter. In order to provide more general models and on the basis
of the ndings of Bonetti et al. (2017), the present work relaxes this as sumption by exploring the scaling of the equilibrium scour depth in cases
where momentum transport is a ected by eddies belonging to the dissipation
and production range. This improvements were applied to the scouring
phenomenon at bridge piers, to derive a predictive formula for the maximum
scour depth, and to the scouring phenomenon at bridge abutments, to derive
a scaling law that does not allow a directly assessment of the maximum scour
depth, but provides new avenues for the development of general predictive
formulae that are founded more on physical than empirical bases. In both
cases, the proposed theory includes the relevant non-dimensional parameters
controlling the scouring process and, contrary to commonly employed
empirical formulae, it is free from scale issues.; Università degli Studi della CalabriaSoggetto
Turbulence; Scour at bridge
Relazione
ICAR/01;