Affiliation:
1. School of Engineering and Design, Civil and Environmental Engineering Technical University of Munich Munich Germany
2. Kathmandu Institute of Complex Flows, Kageshwori Manohara Municipality, Bhadrabas Kathmandu Nepal
3. Department of Geography and Regional Science University of Graz Graz Austria
4. Faculty of Geosciences and Environmental Engineering, Department of Geological Engineering Southwest Jiaotong University Chengdu China
Abstract
AbstractFragmentation is a common phenomenon in complex rock‐avalanches. The fragmentation intensity and process determines exceptional spreading of such mass movements. However, studies focusing on the simulation of fragmentation are still limited and no operational dynamic simulation model of fragmentation has been proposed yet. By enhancing the mechanically controlled landslide deformation model (Pudasaini & Mergili, 2024, https://doi.org/10.1029/2023jf007466), we propose a novel, unified dynamic simulation method for rock‐avalanche fragmentation. The model includes three important aspects: mechanically controlled rock mass deformation, momentum loss while the rock mass fiercely impacts the ground, and the energy transfer during fragmentation resulting in the generation of dispersive lateral pressure. We reveal that the dynamic fragmentation, resulting from the overcoming of the tensile strength by the impact on the ground, leads to enhanced spreading, thinning, run‐out and hypermobility of rock‐avalanches. Thereby, the elastic strain energy release caused by fragmentation becomes an important process. Energy conversion between the front and rear parts caused by the fragmentation results in the enhanced forward movement of the front and hindered motion of the rear of the rock‐avalanche. The new model describes this by amplifying the lateral pressure gradient in the opposite direction: enhanced for the frontal particles and reduced for the rear particles after the fragmentation. The main principle is the switching between the compressional stress and the tensile stress, and therefore from the controlled deformation to substantial spreading of the frontal part in the flow direction while backward stretching of the rear part of the rock mass. Laboratory experiments and field events support our simulation results.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Cited by
1 articles.
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