SWOT analysis of breach models for common dike failure mechanisms
Peeters, P.; Van Hoestenberghe, T.; Vincke, L.; Visser, P. (2011). SWOT analysis of breach models for common dike failure mechanisms, in: Valentine, E.M. et al. (Ed.) Proceedings of the 34th World Congress of the International Association for Hydro- Environment Research and Engineering: Balance and Uncertainty - 33rd Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium and 10th Conference on Hydraulics in Water Engineering , 26 June - 1 July 2011, Brisbane, Australia. pp. 3936-3943
In: Valentine, E.M. et al. (Ed.) (2011). Proceedings of the 34th World Congress of the International Association for Hydro- Environment Research and Engineering: Balance and Uncertainty - 33rd Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium and 10th Conference on Hydraulics in Water Engineering , 26 June - 1 July 2011, Brisbane, Australia. Engineers Australia: Brisbane. ISBN 978-0-85825-868-6. 1 CD-ROM (4583 pp.) pp., more
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Document type: Conference paper
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Author keywords |
Breach models; Dike type; Dijktype; Non-cohesive and cohesive core material |
Authors | | Top |
- Peeters, P., more
- Van Hoestenberghe, T., more
- Vincke, L.
- Visser, P.
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Abstract |
The use of breach models includes two tasks: predicting breach characteristics and estimating flow through the breach. Strengths and weaknesses as well as opportunities and threats of different simplified and detailed physically-based breach models are listed following theoretical and practical criteria. According to the theoretical criteria, the breach models that incorporate detailed breaching processes offer more opportunities. In practice however, these models do not necessarily give rise to better results. From the SWOT-analysis, it can be concluded that consolidation of present knowledge towards a comprehensive breaching theory is far from complete. For flood risk analyses, the challenge remains to find equilibrium between detailed process description and practical model implementation and calibration. Nowadays, some modelling suites are black-box models. Others have numerous modelling options that do not improve transparency. Moreover, all models lack validation for real-world case studies, especially for composite dike types. |
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