Assessing lithological uncertainty in dikes: Simulating construction history and its implications for flood safety assessment
Publication date
2022-12
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Abstract
Dikes often have a long history of reinforcement, with each reinforcement adding new material resulting in a heterogeneous dike. As data on the dike internal heterogeneity is sparse, it is generally overlooked in the stability assessment of dikes. We present an object-based and process-based model simulating dike construction history on archeological dike cross, yielding similar patterns of heterogeneity as observed in real dikes, and apply it in a dike safety assessment. Model predictions improve when being based on more accurate statistics of dike buildup, or when being conditioned to ground truth data. When incorporated in a dike stability assessment, multiple model runs can be coupled to hydrological simulations and dike slope stability calculations, resulting in a probabilistic stability assessment considering internal dike heterogeneity. While high-resolution observations are still sparse, good model accuracies can be reached by combining regional information on dike buildup with local point observations and this model provides a parsimonious basis to include information of internal dike heterogeneity in safety assessments.
Keywords
construction history, dike lithology, flood safety, groundwater, heterogeneity, Environmental Engineering, Geography, Planning and Development, Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality, Water Science and Technology, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities
Citation
van Woerkom, T, van Beek, R, Middelkoop, H & Bierkens, M F P 2022, 'Assessing lithological uncertainty in dikes : Simulating construction history and its implications for flood safety assessment', Journal of Flood Risk Management, vol. 15, no. 4, e12848. https://doi.org/10.1111/jfr3.12848