0% found this document useful (0 votes)
172 views14 pages

08b Rubble Mound BW Design Example

The rubble mound breakwater is designed to withstand waves up to 2 meters high. It will have a crest elevation of 9.3 meters, a 1:2 slope, and armor thickness of 1.4 meters. The crest width will be 2 meters wide. Rough quarry stone with a median weight of 0.77 tons will be used for the two armor layers. The structure is designed to meet the allowable overtopping rate of 0.4 cubic meters per second per meter.

Uploaded by

Hafizh Amazon
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
172 views14 pages

08b Rubble Mound BW Design Example

The rubble mound breakwater is designed to withstand waves up to 2 meters high. It will have a crest elevation of 9.3 meters, a 1:2 slope, and armor thickness of 1.4 meters. The crest width will be 2 meters wide. Rough quarry stone with a median weight of 0.77 tons will be used for the two armor layers. The structure is designed to meet the allowable overtopping rate of 0.4 cubic meters per second per meter.

Uploaded by

Hafizh Amazon
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 14

Rubble Mound Breakwater Design Example

Given:
Design Conditions
Water depth: 5.5 m
Beach slope: 1:20
Design high water: 1.7 m
Design wave Hs = 2 m
H1/10 = 2.5 m
Tm = 8 sec
Lo = 100 m
Allowable overtopping: 0.4 m3/sec/m
Armor unit: rough quarry stone

Soil data:

0m
SM
γ = 17 kN/m3
(sand)
φ = 30°
fine to medium
c=0
5.5 m loose

γ = 14 kN/m3
φ = 0°
CH
c = 50 kPa
(clay)
eo = 2.2
soft
k = 10-5 cm/s
over-consolidated
av = 3x10-3 m2/kN
Cc = 0.3

21.5 m
limestone
B

crown/cap
ocean side
crest bay/harbor side
armor layer, W

R hc first underlayer
DHW

SWL
hb α αb
h
second underlayer
t
toe
core/base

bedding and/or filter


Bt
Assume:
Armor and underlayer material is quarry stone: γa = 2.5 t/m3
Structure slope: 1:2
Structure will be symmetric (this may be changed to reduce structure size in necessary)

Specify Design Condition:


SWL = 5.5 m, DHW = 1.7 m Æ h = 5.5 + 1.7 = 7.2 m
h = 7.2 m
Assume listed conditions are at structure toe.
Hs = H1/3 = 2 m
T = 8 sec
Lo = 100 m
2
 2π   2π   2π  
  = g  tanh  h  at h = 7.2
 T   L  L  
Lm = 62 m
Calculate depth limited breaking wave height at structure site, compare with the
unbroken storm wave height, and use the lesser of the two as the design wave
• Hb/hb ~ 0.78 Æ
at DHW: Hb = 0.78×7.2 = 5.6 m
at SWL: Hb = 0.78×5.5 = 4.3 m
• Alternate methods in CEM II-4
Both wave heights in (1) are greater than Hs Æ
waves are not breaking and design H = Hs = 2 m
H=2m
Set BW Dimensions (controlled by height & slope):
Set-up: waves are not breaking per the previous calc Æ no set-up
NOTE: there will be a set-down, but this will be neglected and considered an
added factor of safety unless required to reduce the structure size
η=0

Overtopping Discharge (CEM VI-5, pp. 19-33)


q  bR *m 
using the Owen model(Table VI-5-8): = a exp −  where
gH s Tm  γr 
R sm
R *m = is the relative freeboard
Hs 2π
H s 2π H s R Hs
• sm = = 2
Æ R *m =
Lo g Tm Hs gTm2

• from Table VI-5-8:


slope 1:2 Æ a = 0.013, b = 22
rock riprap > 2D thick Æ γr ~ 0.55
• solving:
γr  q  0.55  0 .4 
R *m = − ln  = − ln  = 0.041
b  agH s Tm  22  0.013 × 9.8 × 2 × 8 
gTm2 9.8 × 82
R = Hs R *
m = 2 × 0.041 = 1.45 m
Hs 2

Rovertop = 1.45 m

Run-up based on surf zone parameter at the structure, using CEM equation VI-5-13
• Coefficients from VI-5-5: 2% run-up Æ A = 0.96, B = 1.17, C = 0.46, D = 1.97
• (D/B)1/C = (1.97/1.17)(1/0.46) = 3.1, from above ξm = 2.7
for 1.5 < ξm ≤ (D/B)1/C R u ,i % HS = Bξ Cm
(
R u , 2% H S = BξCm = 1.17 2.7 0.46 = 1.85 )
• Reduced Run-up assume γ surface γ berm γ shallow γ wave = 0.55 × 1× 1× 1
roughness water angle

R uR H S = (R u , 2% HS )γ surface γ berm γ shallow γ wave = 1.85 × 0.55 = 1


roughness water angle

• R = Hs = 2m
Rrun-up = 2 m
Choose the run-up requirement (purpose has not been specified, simpler)
R Hs 2 2
• actual overtopping R *m = = = 0.0565
H s gTm 2 9.8 × 82
2

 bR *m   22 × 0.0565 
q = agH s Tm exp −  = 0.013(9.8)(2 )(8) exp −  ≈ 0.2 m / sec/ m
3

 γ r   0 . 55 
R=2m
q = 0.2 m3/sec/m
Settlement: must be determined later Æ assume ρtotal = 0.1 m
ρtotal = 0.1 m
Design elevation = DHW + η + R + ρtotal = 7.2 + 0 + 2 + 0.1 = 9.3 m
h + R = 9.3 m

BW Dimension Summary:
Assumed
• structure is symmetric, α = αb
• no set-down
• no crown, hc = R
• total settlement = 0.1 m (adjust later)
h = 7.2 m
h + R = 9.3 m
tan α = 1/2

Armor Unit Design:


Assume Armor unit is rough quarry stone, 2 layers, no overtopping Æ Table VI-5-22 applies
• non-breaking waves, 0-5% damage, random placement: KD = 4
• sg = γa/γw = (2.5 t/m3)/(1 t/m3) = 2.5
γ a H3 2.5 × 23
• W50 = = = 0.74t
K D (sg − 1) cot α 4(2.5 − 1) 2
3 3

• Table VI-5-50 gives rock sizes: W ~ 0.77 t


W50 = 0.77 t
Armor thickness
• n = 2; k∆ = 1.0, P = 37% from Table VI-5-51
1/ 3 1/ 3
W  0.77 
• t = nk ∆   = 2 × 1×   = 1.4 m
 γa   2.5 
tarmor = 1.4 m
1/ 3 1/ 3
W  0.77 
Crest width (B) (minimum n = 3): B = 3k ∆   = 3 × 1×   = 2m
 γa   2.5 
B=2m
Number of armor units per unit surface area
2/3 2/3
Na  P  γ a   2.5 
= nk ∆ 1 −   = 2 × 1× (1 − 0.37 )  = 2.8
A  100  W   0.77 
Na/A = 2.8 units/m2
Volume of armor per unit length
V
= t[B + 2(h + R )cot α] = 1.4[2 + 2 × 9.3 × 2] = 54.9
L
V/L = 54.9 m3/m
Under-layer Design:
The goal to reduce the size of the stone to at point where W/wcore ≤ 15-25, where W is the
stone in the layer covering the core. Roughly, this gives a size of ~W/4000 for the core
Æ ½ lb stones, with 2 inch diameter. If some other size is readily available, that might be
the goal. Must check to ensure the W/wcore ≤ 15-25 is met once the core over-layer is
known.
Diagram for Volume calculations (quarry stone is sold by unit weight & total volume)
A
V
a ≈ t (a + 2c )
L
α c c = h 2 + (h cot α )
2

h H = h 1 + cot 2 α
t
T b = A + 2(H cot α − T sin α )

b a = A + 2T(cot α − csc α )
B

First Under-Layer
• minimum two stone thick (n = 2)
• under-layer unit weight = W/10 since cover layer and first underlayer are both stone
• W10 = 0.77 t/10 = 0.077 t × 1000 = 77 kg
• next larger available size is 90.7 kg
1/ 3 1/ 3
W  0.091 
• thickness t = nk ∆   = 2 × 1×   = 0.66 m
 γa   2.5 
Volume per unit length of breakwater
• referring to diagram:
h = 9.2 m – tarmor = 9.2 – 1.4 = 7.8 m;
t = tul1 = 0.7 m, T = tarmor = 1.4
A = Bcrest = 2 m, cot α = 2
a = A + 2T(cot α − csc α ) = 2 + 2(1.4 )(2 − 2.2) = 1.4 m
c = h 1 + cot 2 α = 6.8 1 + 4 = 15 m
V
≈ t (a + 2c ) = 0.7(1.4 + 2 × 15) = 22 m 3 m
L
First Under-Layer
W10 = 91 kg
tul1 = 0.7 m
V/Lul1 = 22 m3/m
Second Under-Layer
• minimum two stone thick (n = 2)
• under-layer unit weight = W/20 of the layer above Æ W/200 of armor
• W200 = 0.75 t/200 = 0.004 t × 1000 = 4 kg
• next larger available size is 4.5 kg
1/ 3 1/ 3
W  0.0045 
• thickness t = nk ∆   = 2 × 1×   = 0.24 m
 γa   2.5 
Volume per unit length of breakwater
• referring to diagram:
h = 9.2 m – tarmor – tul1 = 9.2 – 1.4 – 0.7 = 6.1 m
t = tul2 = 0.24 m, T = tul1 = 0.7
A = aul1 = 1.4 m, cot α = 2
a = A + 2T(cot α − csc α ) = 1.4 + 2(0.7 )(2 − 2.2) = 1.1 m
c = h 1 + cot 2 α = 6.1 1 + 4 = 13.6 m
V
≈ t (a + 2c ) = 0.24(1.1 + 2 × 13.6) = 6.8 m 3 m
L
Second Under-Layer
W200 = 4.5 kg
tul2 = 0.24 m
V/Lul1 = 6.8 m3/m
Core
• dynamic load requirement: W w core ≤ 15 to 25 Æ W = 4.5 kg Æ
wcore ≥ 4.5/25 – 4.5/15 = 0.18 – 0.3 kg
• W4000 = 0.75 t/4000 = 0.00019 t × 1000 = 0.2 kg
• next larger available size is 0.23 kg
1/ 3 1/ 3
W  0.0045 
• thickness t = nk ∆   = 2 × 1×   = 0.24 m
 γa   2.5 
Volume per unit length of breakwater
• referring to diagram:
h = 9.2 m – tarmor – tul1 – tul2 = 9.2 – 1.4 – 0.7 – 0.24 = 5.9 m
H = hul2 = 6.1 m, T = tul2 = 0.24
A = aul2 = 1.1 m; cot α = 2
a = A + 2T(cot α − csc α ) = 1.1 + 2(0.24 )(2 − 2.2) = 1 m
b = A + 2(H cot α − T csc α ) = 1.1 + 2(6.1× 2 − 0.24 × 2.2 ) = 24.4 m
V 1
trapezoid: ≈ 2 h (a + b ) = 12 5.9(1 + 24.4) = 75 m3 m
L
Core
W4000 = 0.23 kg
V/L = 75 m3/m
Toe Design:
• Toe Berm Width (Bt) should be the maximum of Bt = 2H or Bt = 0.4h, and at least 3
stones wide: 2H = 4 m, 0.4h = 0.4×5.5 = 2.2 m (use lower water level)
• assume Bt = 4 m
• assume height of toe = 1.4 m (guess) Æ hb = 5.5 – 1.4 = 4.1 m (use lower water level)
• Table VI-5-45 with hb/h = 4.1/5.5 = 0.75 Æ Ns3 ~ 60
γ SH 3 2.5 × 23
W= = = 0.1 t Æ nearest size is 136 kg = 0.14 t Æ
N 3s (sg − 1) 60(2.5 − 1)
3 3

1/ 3 1/ 3
W  0.14 
D =   =  = 0.38 m Æ 2 stones height = 2×0.38 = 0.76 m < 1.4 m
 γs   2.5 

• Table VI-5-48
k = 2π/Lm = 2π/62 = 0.101 m-1 Æ 2khb = 2×0.101×5.8 = 1.17
2kh b 1.17
K= sin 2 kBt = sin 2 (0.101× 4) = 0.124
sinh 2kh b sinh (1.17 )

1− K  h 
N s = 1.3 1 / 3  b + 1.8 exp − 1.5
(1 − K )2 h b 

 K  Hs  K1 / 3 H s 

 1 − 0.124  4.1
= 1.3 +


(1 − 0.124)2  4.1  = 4.7
1/ 3   
1 . 8 exp  1 . 5
 0.124  2  0.1241 / 3  2 

γ SH 3 2.5 × 23
Ns3 ~ 103 Æ W = = = 0.06 t
N 3s (sg − 1) 103(2.5 − 1)
3 3

• use W = 0.14 t and recalculate with ht = 5.5 – 0.8 = 4.7 m Æ hb/h = 4.7/5.5 = 0.85
this is not on the chart Æ Ns3 ~ 60 Æ keep previous calculation
Wtoe = 136 kg
hb = 4.7 m
(below SWL)
toe height = 0.8 m
Bt = 4 m
• Toe volume
assume slope is 1:2 Æ base length = Bt + 2(SWL-hb)cot α = 4 + 2×0.8×2 = 7.2 m
assume trapezoidal Æ V/L = (SWL-hb)(Bt + base) = 0.8(4 + 7.2) = 9 m3/m
V/Ltoe = 9 m3/m
Toe-to-Toe Width:
W = 2Bt + 2(SWL-hb)cot αt + B + 2(hb + DHW + R + ρ)cot α
= 2×4 + 2×0.8×2 + 2 + 2× (4.7 + 1.7 + 2 + 0.1) ×2 = 47.2 m

Filter/Bed Design:
W50 ( bed )
• To prevent material from leaching out: < 15 to 20
W50 ( core )
• Wcore = 0.23 kg Æ Wbed > 3.5 – 4.6 kg Æ dbed ~ 12 cm Æ cobble

General guidelines
• for stability against wave attack, bedding Layer thickness should be:
o 2-3 times the diameter for large stone
o 10 cm for coarse sand
o 20 cm for gravel
• For foundation stability Bedding Layer thickness should be at least 2 feet
• Bedding Layer should extend 5 feet horizontally beyond the toe cover stone.

• Bedding layer should be 0.6 m thick, d50 ~ 12 cm (cobble)


• Extent: toe-to-toe width + 2×1.5 m = 47.2 + 3 = 50.2 m
Structure Summary:
total height (h + R): 9.3 m
slope (tan α): 1:2
Crest Width (B): 2m
Freeboard (R): 2m
Estimated Overtopping (q) 0.2 m3/sec/m
Settlement (ρ): 0.1 m (assumed)
Toe-to-Toe width: 47.2 m
Armor: W50 = 0.77 t
n = 2, t = 1.4 m
Na/A = 2.8 units/m2
V/L = 54.9 m3/m
First Under-Layer: W50 = 91 kg
n = 2, t = 0.7 m
V/L = 22 m3/m
Second Under-Layer: W50 = 4.5 kg
n = 2, t = 0.24 m
V/L = 6.8 m3/m
Core: W50 = 0.23 kg
V/L = 75 m3/m
Toe: W50 = 136 kg
hb = 4.7 m below SWL
toe height = 0.8 m
Bt = 4 m
toe base width = 7.2 m
V/L = 9 m3/m
Bedding: W50 = 4.5 kg
thickness = 0.6 m
horizontal length = 50.2 m
V/L = 30.1 m3/m
Settlement & Bearing Capacity:

BW Load
Volume & Weight above SWL (dry, unsubmerged load):
Height = 9.3 – 5.5 = 3.8 m
B=2
Width at WL = B + 2hcot α = 2 + 2×3.8×2 = 17.2 m
V/L = ½ 3.8(2 + 17.2) = 36.5 m3/m
Weight of material = Wabove WL = γ (1-P/100) V/L = 2.5 (1 – 0.37)36.5 = 57.5 t/m
Submerged Volume & Weight
Submerged
V/Ltotal = (V/L)armor + (V/L)ul1 + (V/L)ul2 + (V/L)core +(V/L)toe + (V/L)bed
= 55 + 22 + 6.8 + 75 + 9 + 30.1 = 198 m3/m
V/Lsubmerged = 198 – 36.5 = 162 m3/m
W = [γ(1 – P/100) + γw(P/100)] V/Lsubmerged = [2.5(1-0.37) + 1×0.37]162
Wbelow WL = 315 t/m

Total Load
∆σ = (Wabove WL + Wbelow WL)/(foundation width)

Sand Layer: ∆σ = (57.5 + 315)/47.2 = 7.9 t/m2

Clay Layer Æ correct for distribution of load through sand layer (see diagram)
∆σ = (57.5 + 315)/[47.2 + 2×(5.5-0.6)×2] = 5.5 t/m2

DHW

SWL

H1 Sand
γ' = 7 kN/m3
φ = 35°

Clay
BB
γ' = 4 kN/m3
c = 20 kPa
BB + 2H1cot φ
Bearing Capacity
Evaluate the ultimate bearing capacity, qu, for each level (very conservative, but simple)
For saturated, submerged soils
strip foundations: q u = q c + q q + q γ = cN c + qN q + 0.5γ′BN γ

NOTE: This formula is not for multiple layer soils. This calculation will only give a
rough approximation.
Sand Layer:
γ = 17 kN/m3, φ = 30°, c = 0
Terzaghi Table: Nc = 37.16, Nq = 22.46, Nγ = 19.13
Df = Foundation depth (bedding layer thickness) = 0.6 m
Assume γw = 10 kN/m3
BW foundation width (neglect bed) = 47.2 m
qc = cNc = 0
qq = γ'DfNq = (17-10)×0.6×22.46 = 94 kN/m2
qγ = ½ γ'BNγ = ½ ×(17-10) ×47.2×19.13 = 3160 kN/m2
qu = 0 + 94 + 3160 = 3254 kN/m2 = 325 t/m2

∆σ = 7.9 t/m2
FS = qu/ ∆σ = 325/15.1 = 21.5
FSsand = 21
Clay Layer:
γ = 14 kN/m3, φ = 0, c = 50 kN/m2
Terzaghi Table: Nc = 5.7, Nq = 1, Nγ = 0
Df = 0
qc = cNc = 50×5.7 = 285 kN/m2
qq = γ'DfNq = 0
qγ = ½ γ'BNγ = 0
qu = 285 + 0 + 0 = 285 kN/m2 = 28.5 t/m2

clay layer also supports the sand layer: ∆σsand = 0.7×4.9 t/m2 = 3.4 t/m2
∆σ = 5.5 t/m2 + 3.4 t/m2 = 8.9 t/m2
FS = qu/ ∆σ = 28.5/8.9 = 3.2
FSclay = 3.2

Preliminary Safety Factor


FS = 3.2
Settlement
Sand Layer: ∆σ = 7.9 t/m2
Clay Layer: ∆σ = 5.5 t/m2
Settlement in Sand:
Assume L/B > 10
Iz = Iz10 = 0.2
depth of Izp: z = z10 = 1.0B Æ Z = 1
σ'zp = σzp – u = γ'ZB = (1.7 – 1) B = 0.7×47.2 = 33 t/m2
∆σ'z = q - σ'0 = 7.9 - (1.7 – 1)×0.6 = 7.5 t/m2

∆σ z ' 7.5
I zp = 0.5 + 0.1 = 0.5 + 0.1 = 0.55
σ zp ' 33

depth of influence: z = 4B = 4×47.2 = 190 m


assume one layer ∆z = 4.9 m
I zp − 0.2 0.55 − 0.2
z = 4.9/2 = 2.45 m Æ I z = 0.2 + z = 0.2 + 2.45 = 0.22
zp 47.2

assume qc/N60 ~ 5 bar = 50 t/m2 (see table in notes)


L/B = 10 Æ E = 3.5qc = 3.5×50 = 175 t/m2
(note: E table in notes gives E 10× higher for loose sand)
 σ'   (1.7 − 1)0.6 
C1 = 1 − 0.5 0  = 1 − 0.5  = 0.97
 ∆σ' Z   7 .5 
 t yrs 
 = 1 + 0.2 log10 
25 
C 2 = 1 + 0.2 log10   = 1.5 , assume 25 yr life
 0 .1   0 .1 

n
Ι   0.22 
ρ = C1C 2 ∆σ ∑  z  ∆z i = 0.97 ×1.5 ×  4.9 = 0.01 m
i =1  E  i  175 
ρsand = 0.01 m
Settlement in Clay:
Primary Consolidation Settlement (ρc)
γ = 14 kN/m3, φ = 0°, c = 50 kPa, eo = 2.2, k = 10-5 cm/s, av = 3x10-3 m2/kN, Cc = 0.3
∆σ = 5.5 t/m2
σ'0 = (1.7 – 1)×4.9 + ½ (1.4-1)×21.5 = 7.7 t/m2
assume CR = 0.2Cc = 0.06
0.06 × 21.5  7.7 + 5.5 
Over-consolidated: ρc = − log  = 0.09 m
1 + 2.2  7.7 
Consider time to consolidate:
k = 10-5cm/s × 10-2m/cm × 3600s/hr × 24hrs/day × 365days/yr = 3.15 m/yr
k (1 + e 0 ) 3.15(1 + 2.2)
cv = = −3
= 336 m 2 / yr
γ wa v 10 × 3 × 10
N = 1, Tv (95%) = 1.129
cv t H2 21.52
Tv = Æ t = T = 1.129 = 1.55 yrs
(H N )2 v
cv 336

Secondary Consolidation Settlement (ρs)


Assume Cα/Cc ~ 0.03 Æ Cα ~ 0.01
assume tp = 2 yrs and the breakwater lifetime is 25 yrs
C H  t   0.01× 21.5   25 
ρ s =  α  log  F  =   log   = 0.07 m
 1 + e0   t P   1 + 2 .2   2 
ρ = ρ/i + ρc + ρs = 0 + 0.09 + 0.07 = 0.16 m

ρclay = 0.16 m

Total Settlement
ρ = ρsand + ρclay = 0.01 + 0.16 = 0.17 m
ρtotal = 0.17 m
should recalculate design with ρ ~ 0.2 m vice 0.1 m

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy