Abstract

A major hazard to embankment dams is internal erosion and piping arising from concentrated leaks through transverse cracks in the core near the crest due to differential settlement or desiccation. This contribution summarises experiments and a formal boundary layer analysis of flow through such transverse cracks subject to near-horizontal pressure gradients. The critical hydraulic gradients, at which erosion in such cracks may initiate, occur at the downstream end of the crack. This location and the maximum crack width defines the local point most vulnerable to erosion. The hydraulic laboratory measurements are shown to be consistent with equivalent international standards describing depths at free overflows, in spite of the narrow vertical profile of the cracks, provided that the tendency towards laminar flow in very narrow cracks is incorporated within the modelling. A backwater model based on conventional representations of flow in narrow channels is verified qualitatively by hydraulic laboratory data. Flow-depth relationships, maximum crack wall hydraulic stresses, normalised hydraulic wall stress profiles and depth profiles along cracks are presented for the two principal crack geometries present in embankment dams. These characterisations are a significant improvement on the simplified methods previously used to assess internal erosion in transverse cracks in dams.

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