Abstract

Water level rise and fall can lead to changes in seepage flow in the bank slopes of reservoirs. Cyclic seepage flow can result in the redistribution and even loss of fine particles in the slope, which eventually influences the slope stability. In this study, numerical simulations were conducted based on a multispecies transport finite element method (FEM) to investigate the influence of periodic water level fluctuations on the reservoir bank slope. The unsaturated soil was treated as a five-constituent mixture, by which erosion and deposition behaviours were captured by phase transition between deposited and fluidized fines. A constitutive model for suffusion considering the hydraulic fluctuation effect was employed to quantify the erosion process. The change in the seepage field and the corresponding evolution of the erosion rate and fines eroded ratio in the slope during the fluctuation period were investigated. The influence of the water level fluctuation frequency on the fines redistribution in the slope was analysed. Furthermore, the evolution patterns of the slope stability under different fluctuation frequencies were compared. The numerical results indicated that a higher fluctuation frequency could promote fine particle loss in the zones near the slope surface, consequently inducing greater deterioration in the slope stability.

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