Refine
Year of publication
Institute
- Fachbereich Bauingenieurwesen (712) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (334)
- Conference Proceeding (139)
- Book (118)
- Part of a Book (86)
- Report (19)
- Doctoral Thesis (6)
- Contribution to a Periodical (2)
- Course Material (2)
- Patent (2)
- Working Paper (2)
Keywords
- Kanalisation (4)
- Wasserbau (4)
- Wasserwirtschaft (4)
- metal structure (4)
- steel (4)
- Aachen / Fachhochschule Aachen / Fachbereich Bauingenieurwesen (3)
- Absolvententreffen (3)
- Alfha.net (3)
- Alumni (3)
- Fließgewässer (3)
Block ramps are ecologically oriented drop structures with adequate energy dissipation and partially moderate flow velocities. A special case is given with crossbar block ramps, where the upstream and downstream level difference is reduced by a series of basins. To prevent the total structure from failing, the stability of single boulders within the crossbars and the bed material in between must be guaranteed. The present paper addresses the stability of bed material and scour development for various flow regimes. Any bed material erosion may affect the stability of the crossbar boulders, which in turn can result in major damages of the ramp. Therefore new design approaches are developed to choose an appropriate bed material size and to avoid failures of crossbar block ramp structures.
Vermittlung wissenschaftlicher Schreibkompetenzen unter Einbeziehung aktueller Forschungsinhalte
(2008)
Various models have been proposed for the prediction of the necessary support pressure at the face of a shallow tunnel. To assess their quality, the collapse of a tunnel face was modelled with small-scale model tests at single gravity. The development of the failure mechanism and the support force at the face in dry sand were investigated. The observed displacement patterns show a negligible influence of overburden on the extent and evolution of the failure zone. The latter is significantly influenced, though, by the initial density of the sand: in dense sand a chimney-wedge-type collapse mechanism developed, which propagated towards the soil surface. Initially, loose sand did not show any discrete collapse mechanism. The necessary support force was neither influenced by the overburden nor the initial density. A comparison with quantitative predictions by several theoretical models showed that the measured necessary support pressure is overestimated by most of the models. Those by Vermeer/Ruse and Léca/Dormieux showed the best agreement to the measurements.