Abstract
Abstract. Dry-snow slab avalanche release is preceded by a fracture process within the snowpack. Recognizing weak-layer collapse as an integral part of the fracture process is crucial and explains phenomena such as whumpf sounds and remote triggering of avalanches from low-angle terrain. In this two-part work we propose a novel closed-form analytical model for a snowpack under skier loading and a mixed-mode failure criterion for the nucleation of weak-layer failure. In the first part of this two-part series we introduce a closed-form analytical model of a snowpack accounting for the deformable layer. Despite the importance of persistent weak layers for slab avalanche release, no simple analytical model considering weak-layer deformations is available. The proposed model provides deformations of the snow slab, weak-layer stresses and energy release rates of cracks within the weak layer. It generally applies to skier-loaded slopes as well as stability tests such as the propagation saw test. A validation with a numerical reference model shows very good agreement of the stress and energy release rate results in several parametric studies including analyses of the bridging effect and slope angle dependence. The proposed model is used to analyze 93 propagation saw tests. Computed weak-layer fracture toughness values are physically meaningful and in excellent agreement with finite element analyses. In the second part of the series (Rosendahl and Weißgraeber, 2020) we make use of the present mechanical model to establish a novel failure criterion crack nucleation in weak layers. The code used for the analyses in both parts is publicly available under https://github.com/2phi/weac (last access: 6 January 2020) (2phi, 2020).
Highlights
IntroductionThe earliest approaches to snowpack stability were socalled stability indices
Dry-snow slab avalanches can release when a persistent weak layer of, for example, surface hoar or depth hoar breaks
If the conditions allow for crack propagation, i.e., if the energy release rate of a growing crack suffices, a triggered initial defect may extend across slopes and eventually cause the slab to fail and slide
Summary
The earliest approaches to snowpack stability were socalled stability indices. They consider snowpack loading owing to the weight of the snow slab and owing to additional loading by a skier (Perla, 1977; Föhn, 1987). To account for snow stratification improved stability index models were proposed by Habermann et al (2008) and Monti et al (2015). These local models are insufficient to describe the stability of snowpacks across slopes (Bellaire and Schweizer, 2011). Many researchers suggested that stability indices are incomplete as they do not account for the propagation of the failure within the snowpack (van Herwijnen and Jamieson, 2007)
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