Des éboulements expérimentaux améliorent l’évaluation des risques

Des scientifiques du SLF et de l’ETH Zurich ont mené pendant quatre ans des expériences d’éboulements et rassemblé le plus vaste ensemble de données collecté à ce jour. Les résultats démontrent entre autres que les pierres en forme de roue parcourent une zone plus large que les pierres de forme cubique. Ces nouvelles connaissances sont importantes pour l’évaluation du danger et le dimensionnement des infrastructures de protection. Les mesures effectuées permettent d’étalonner et de perfectionner les logiciels de calcul, afin de mieux représenter la réalité.
Expériences d’éboulements. Photo : Andrin Caviezel, SLF

Rockfall is a very real threat in an Alpine country like Switzerland. In order to assess the hazard at a given location and plan protective measures, engineering firms use computer models to calculate how far falling rocks can roll. However, the models are not yet able to adequately take into account the extent to which the mass, size or shape of a rock influences its movement. This would require real-world measurement data to be fed into the models, but until now such data were only available sporadically, since no systematic rockfall studies had been conducted.

First comprehensive experiments

That has now changed after researchers from the SLF and ETH Zurich spent over four years carrying out rockfall experiments. "This has allowed us to compile the largest set of measurement data to date," says Andrin Caviezel, SLF researcher and lead author of the study. The researchers used artificial rocks in the form of concrete blocks fitted with sensors, which they rolled down a slope near the Flüela Pass in the Swiss canton of Grisons. They compared different shapes and masses, reconstructed the complete trajectories and determined speeds, jump heights and runout zones (see info box). They have just published their results in the prestigious scientific journal Nature Communications.

Lateral spread

The most significant finding is that the direction a rock rolls in depends much more on its shape than on its mass. While cube-shaped boulders plunge straight down the line of greatest slope, wheel-shaped rocks often pull away to one side and so may threaten a much wider area at the base of the slope. "This needs to be taken into consideration when assessing danger zones, but also when determining the location and dimensions of rockfall nets," explains Caviezel. Because wheel-like rocks hit rockfall nets with their narrow side, their energy is concentrated on a much smaller area than is the case with cube-like rocks – so protective nets need to be stronger.

More realistic models

The data are now being entered into the RAMMS::ROCKFALL simulation program developed at the SLF. As well as factoring in the shape, the aim is to represent more realistically how the rock's speed is affected by the way it impacts and bounces off the ground. "This will enable us to offer an enhanced program that engineering firms can use to make more reliable calculations," says Caviezel. The data set is also available on the EnviDat platform, where it is freely accessible to other research groups. They can use it to calibrate their own algorithms or to develop new, more accurate models providing enhanced protection against rockfall.

The rockfall experiments in numbers

  • Number of concrete blocks: 183
  • Weight of the blocks: 45, 200, 800 and 2,670 kg
  • Number of reconstructed trajectories: 82
  • Usable impacts: 1,394
  • Maximum jump height: 11.1 m
  • Maximum speed: 30.3 m/s = 109 km/h