4.7 Article

Eco-Engineering of Seawalls-An Opportunity for Enhanced Climate Resilience From Increased Topographic Complexity

期刊

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
卷 8, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.674630

关键词

climate change; coastal resilience; eco-engineering; ecologically enhanced seawall; vertical breakwaters; wave overtopping; coastal flooding

资金

  1. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the Ireland-Wales Cooperation Programme

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In the field of green coastal engineering, the concept of eco-engineering involves incorporating ecological concepts into traditional marine infrastructure design to reduce wave overtopping and coastal flood risks while promoting biodiversity. Studies have shown that increasing the roughness of seawalls through eco-engineering interventions can significantly decrease wave overtopping, highlighting the potential for eco-engineering to mitigate extreme wave overtopping hazards.
In the context of green approaches to coastal engineering, the term eco-engineering has emerged in recent years to describe the incorporation of ecological concepts (including artificially water-filled depressions and surface textured tiles on seawalls and drilled holes in sea structures) into the conventional design process for marine infrastructures. Limited studies have evaluated the potential increase in wave energy dissipation resulting from the increased hydraulic roughness of ecologically modified sea defences which could reduce wave overtopping and consequent coastal flood risks, while increasing biodiversity. This paper presents results of small-scale laboratory investigations of wave overtopping on artificially roughened seawalls. Impulsive and non-impulsive wave conditions with two deep-water wave steepness values (=0.015 and 0.06) are evaluated to simulate both swell and storm conditions in a twodimensional wave flume with an impermeable 1:20 foreshore slope. Measurements from a plain vertical seawall are taken as the reference case. The seawall was subsequently modified to include 10 further test configurations where hydraulic effects, reflective of eco-engineering interventions, were simulated by progressively increasing seawall roughness with surface protrusions across three length scales and three surface densities. Measurements at the plain vertical seawall compared favorably to empirical predictions from the EurOtop II Design Manual and served as a validation of the experimental approach. Results from physical model experiments showed that increasing the length and/or density of surface protrusions reduced overtopping on seawalls. Benchmarking of test results from experiments with modified seawalls to reference conditions showed that the mean overtopping rate was reduced by up to 100% (test case where protrusion density and length were maximum) under impulsive wave conditions. Results of this study highlight the potential for eco-engineering interventions on seawalls to mitigate extreme wave overtopping hazards by dissipating additional wave energy through increased surface roughness on the structure.

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