Physical model experiment of rainfall-induced instability of a two-layer slope: implications for early warning

Understanding the slope hydrology and failure processes of rainfall-induced landslides is key to landslide early warning; the heterogeneity of soil (e.g., grain-size distribution in different layers) can markedly affect rainfall infiltration and slope failure patterns. However, the hydrological and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Landslides 2024-12, Vol.21 (12), p.3149-3167
Hauptverfasser: Shiqiang, Bian, Chen, Guan, Meng, Xingmin, Yang, Yunpeng, Wu, Jie, Huang, Fengchun, Wu, Bing, Jin, Jiacheng, Qiao, Feiyu, Chong, Yan, Cheng, Donglin
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container_end_page 3167
container_issue 12
container_start_page 3149
container_title Landslides
container_volume 21
creator Shiqiang, Bian
Chen, Guan
Meng, Xingmin
Yang, Yunpeng
Wu, Jie
Huang, Fengchun
Wu, Bing
Jin, Jiacheng
Qiao, Feiyu
Chong, Yan
Cheng, Donglin
description Understanding the slope hydrology and failure processes of rainfall-induced landslides is key to landslide early warning; the heterogeneity of soil (e.g., grain-size distribution in different layers) can markedly affect rainfall infiltration and slope failure patterns. However, the hydrological and failure processes of heterogeneous slopes layered by different soil groups have received little attention. In this study, we use a typical landslide soil composition of rainfall-induced landslide in fault zones as a prototype and via flume experiments to simulate the hydrological evolution, failure processes, and patterns under rainfall conditions on material heterogeneity slopes with a combination of colluvial deposit and fault gouge. Our results showed that rainfall-induced slope settlement and rapid saturation of shallow layers of colluvial deposits led to the occurrence of layer-by-layer shallow flow-slides. The spatial variability of infiltration led to the generation of a relatively dry‒wet interface in deeper layers, causing differential changes in the mechanical properties of the fault gouge; this was conducive to the formation of a steep landslide back wall, perched water table in the shallow layer of the fault gouge, and a rapid increase in porewater pressure, which triggered deep sliding, with a change in the failure pattern to a retrogressive mode. There was a strong linear correlation between the displacement rate before slope instability and the Arias intensity ( I A ) of the seismic signal; an abrupt change and rapid increase in I A may indicate that the slope entered an accelerating creep stage before failure. The results of this study provide a physical basis for related numerical simulation research and a reference for landslide early warning based on seismic signals.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10346-024-02339-0
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The results of this study provide a physical basis for related numerical simulation research and a reference for landslide early warning based on seismic signals.</abstract><cop>Berlin/Heidelberg</cop><pub>Springer Berlin Heidelberg</pub><doi>10.1007/s10346-024-02339-0</doi><tpages>19</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Agriculture
Civil Engineering
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Failure
Fault lines
Fault zones
Flowslides
Flumes
Geography
Grain size distribution
Groundwater table
Heterogeneity
Hydrologic processes
Hydrology
Infiltration
Interface stability
Landslide warnings
Landslides
Landslides & mudslides
Mathematical models
Mechanical properties
Natural Hazards
Numerical simulations
Pore water
Precipitation
Rainfall
Rainfall infiltration
Seismic stability
Size distribution
Slope
Slope hydrology
Slope stability
Soil
Soil composition
Soil layers
Spatial variability
Spatial variations
Technical Note
Water table
title Physical model experiment of rainfall-induced instability of a two-layer slope: implications for early warning
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