Abstract

In this study, as part of basic research aimed at enhancing the accuracy of load and resistance coefficients to ensure their suitability for practical design and promoting the application of underutilized reliability-based design in Korea, the author conducts optimal design based on the reliability analysis of a vertical-type breakwater in the seas off of Haeundae, Yeosu, Mokpo, Gunsan, and Incheon—representative ports in Korea. In doing so, the author utilized the double-loop approach, which simultaneously addresses a reliability problem nested within an optimization process, employing the Polak–He optimization algorithm. To mitigate the substantial numerical effort required by the double-loop approach based on the Polak–He optimization algorithm, which necessitates the gradients of both cost and constraint functions, the subset simulation method was employed. In this process, the author deliberately refrained from using design waves of a specific return period and linear probabilistic models such as the Gaussian distribution, especially concerning wave and lift forces, often viewed as barriers to the widespread application of reliability-based design in Korea. Instead, the author focused on characterizing the uncertainties associated with the wave force, lift force, and overturning moment—variables that significantly impact the integrity of vertical-type breakwaters—by developing probabilistic models for these random variables directly from long-term in situ wave data. These models capture the varied characteristics of the Korean marine environment from sea to sea. In this way, the need for additional assumptions concerning the interrelationship between significant wave and maximum wave heights, along with the wave period, can be eliminated. Following Occam's razor principle, which suggests that explanations constructed with the smallest possible set of assumptions are superior, the reliability-based design optimization of a vertical-type breakwater presented in this study demonstrates promise in terms of simplicity and practicality. The limit state of the vertical-type breakwater was defined to encompass sliding, overturning, and collapse failures, and the strong interrelations between the wave force, lift force, and overturning moment were described using the Nataf joint distribution. As anticipated, simulation results show that solely considering sliding failure, as in the current reliability-based design platform in Korea, leads to an underestimated failure probability. Furthermore, ensuring a consistent failure probability for vertical-type breakwaters using design waves with a specific return period, as in past studies, is not feasible. In contrast, this study demonstrated that breakwaters optimally designed to meet the reliability index requirement of β = 3.5–4 consistently maintain a target failure probability in all sea areas.

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