Tsunamis and other extreme hydrodynamic events have the potential to transport large debris that, along with the flow, are capable of causing severe damage to coastal structures and infrastructures. Therefore, modelling such processes is essential when assessing the multiple hazards associated to this type of events. In harbour areas, transport inland of shipping containers and subsequent impacts are relevant examples of waterborne debris hazards. The present work addresses two gaps in the scientific research of this problem using numerical methods; the understanding of the effect of containers initial layouts and that of the flow impact angle on the transport and diffusion. To fill these gaps a numerical study was carried out using idealised flow conditions. To this end a Smoothed Particles Hydrodynamics solver (DualSPHysics), coupled with a Discrete Element Method model (Project CHRONO), was used and initially validated with experiments published in the literature. Subsequently, four layouts commonly used in shipping containers yards were simulated, including incident flow depth and impact angle variability, resulting in 76 total simulations. The results were analysed in terms of normalised standard deviation and normalised range differences with respect to the initial values of both parameters. These parameters were related to the flow impact angle, water depth to containers height ratio DhR, and normalised displacement of the container clusters centroids. Standard deviation and range are shown to reach, for almost all results, a quasi-steady state by the end of the simulations. It is shown that the standard deviation and range are more sensitive to the impact angle for DhR ≤ 1.7. In this case, the configurations with flow impacting orthogonally to one of the containers axes show larger values of the two parameters than for intermediate angles. For larger values, DhR drives the standard deviation and range, independently from the impact angle. DhR is shown to be a physical parameter that well describes the relative importance of dispersion and advection of containers transported in extreme hydrodynamic events. Finally, existing relationships, that assume an infinite growth of the range, are shown to overestimate numerical results at the stage in which dispersion does not grow further. Two new regression formulae are numerically derived to predict the dispersion parameters at this stage. They include the effects of the cluster layout, impact angle α and DhR making them a valid alternative to existing relationships

Numerical analysis and prediction of the effect of debris initial configurations on their dispersion during extreme-hydrodynamic events / Ruffini, Gioele; Briganti, Riccardo; Stolle, Jacob; De Girolamo, Paolo. - In: COASTAL ENGINEERING. - ISSN 0378-3839. - 198:(2025). [10.1016/j.coastaleng.2025.104702]

Numerical analysis and prediction of the effect of debris initial configurations on their dispersion during extreme-hydrodynamic events

Ruffini, Gioele
Primo
;
De Girolamo, Paolo
2025

Abstract

Tsunamis and other extreme hydrodynamic events have the potential to transport large debris that, along with the flow, are capable of causing severe damage to coastal structures and infrastructures. Therefore, modelling such processes is essential when assessing the multiple hazards associated to this type of events. In harbour areas, transport inland of shipping containers and subsequent impacts are relevant examples of waterborne debris hazards. The present work addresses two gaps in the scientific research of this problem using numerical methods; the understanding of the effect of containers initial layouts and that of the flow impact angle on the transport and diffusion. To fill these gaps a numerical study was carried out using idealised flow conditions. To this end a Smoothed Particles Hydrodynamics solver (DualSPHysics), coupled with a Discrete Element Method model (Project CHRONO), was used and initially validated with experiments published in the literature. Subsequently, four layouts commonly used in shipping containers yards were simulated, including incident flow depth and impact angle variability, resulting in 76 total simulations. The results were analysed in terms of normalised standard deviation and normalised range differences with respect to the initial values of both parameters. These parameters were related to the flow impact angle, water depth to containers height ratio DhR, and normalised displacement of the container clusters centroids. Standard deviation and range are shown to reach, for almost all results, a quasi-steady state by the end of the simulations. It is shown that the standard deviation and range are more sensitive to the impact angle for DhR ≤ 1.7. In this case, the configurations with flow impacting orthogonally to one of the containers axes show larger values of the two parameters than for intermediate angles. For larger values, DhR drives the standard deviation and range, independently from the impact angle. DhR is shown to be a physical parameter that well describes the relative importance of dispersion and advection of containers transported in extreme hydrodynamic events. Finally, existing relationships, that assume an infinite growth of the range, are shown to overestimate numerical results at the stage in which dispersion does not grow further. Two new regression formulae are numerically derived to predict the dispersion parameters at this stage. They include the effects of the cluster layout, impact angle α and DhR making them a valid alternative to existing relationships
2025
flow-debris interaction; debris dispersion; extreme hydrodynamics events; extreme flows; tsunamis; dualSPHysics
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Numerical analysis and prediction of the effect of debris initial configurations on their dispersion during extreme-hydrodynamic events / Ruffini, Gioele; Briganti, Riccardo; Stolle, Jacob; De Girolamo, Paolo. - In: COASTAL ENGINEERING. - ISSN 0378-3839. - 198:(2025). [10.1016/j.coastaleng.2025.104702]
File allegati a questo prodotto
File Dimensione Formato  
Ruffini_Numerical-analysis-prediction_2024.pdf

accesso aperto

Note: articolo
Tipologia: Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 3.96 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
3.96 MB Adobe PDF

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1733177
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 1
social impact