Parameterization of a numerical 2-D debris flow model with entrainment: a case study of the Faucon catchment, Southern French Alps
Publication date
2012
Authors
Hussin, H.Y.
Luna, B. Quan
Westen, C.J. van
Christen, M.
Malet, J.P.
Asch, Th.W.J. van
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
The occurrence of debris flows has been recorded
for more than a century in the European Alps, accounting for
the risk to settlements and other human infrastructure that
have led to death, building damage and traffic disruptions.
One of the difficulties in the quantitative hazard assessment
of debris flows is estimating the run-out behavior, which includes
the run-out distance and the related hazard intensities
like the height and velocity of a debris flow. In addition, as
observed in the French Alps, the process of entrainment of
material during the run-out can be 10–50 times in volume
with respect to the initially mobilized mass triggered at the
source area. The entrainment process is evidently an important
factor that can further determine the magnitude and intensity
of debris flows. Research on numerical modeling of
debris flow entrainment is still ongoing and involves some
difficulties. This is partly due to our lack of knowledge of
the actual process of the uptake and incorporation of material
and due the effect of entrainment on the final behavior
of a debris flow. Therefore, it is important to model the effects
of this key erosional process on the formation of runouts
and related intensities. In this study we analyzed a debris
flow with high entrainment rates that occurred in 2003 at
the Faucon catchment in the Barcelonnette Basin (Southern
French Alps). The historic event was back-analyzed using
the Voellmy rheology and an entrainment model imbedded
in the RAMMS 2-D numerical modeling software. A sensitivity
analysis of the rheological and entrainment parameters
was carried out and the effects of modeling with entrainment
on the debris flow run-out, height and velocity were assessed.