1. Introduction
For the design of rubble mound breakwaters, it is important to analyze the structure response under environmental loads such as waves and currents (e.g., [
1,
2,
3,
4]), as well as storm surge events (e.g., [
5,
6]). Van Gent [
7] and Celli et al. [
8] argued that introducing a berm in the seaward side of rubble mound breakwaters can increase the stability of the rocks in the armor layer. Their research studies revealed that the presence of the berm enhances the wave energy dissipation before the waves reach the armor layer, leading to a reduced rock diameter required for the stability, compared with conventional rubble mound breakwaters.
Further to the structure response, when designing rubble mound breakwaters, the soil response and its effect on the foundation stability must be assessed. The stability of these structures can be threatened by geotechnical causes, such as the wave-induced soil liquefaction in the vicinity of the structure. The excess pore pressure induced by the wave propagation is accountable for the triggering of the residual and the momentary liquefaction (e.g., [
9,
10,
11]). The residual liquefaction, typical of loose sand deposits, occurs when the wave-induced excess of pore water pressure overcomes the overburden pressure, making the soil particles completely unbound [
12]. The momentary liquefaction generally occurs in dense sands if the upward pore pressure gradient, induced by wave troughs, overcomes the initial vertical effective stress (e.g., [
13]).
Besides increasing the armor layer stability, Celli et al. [
13] showed that deploying a submerged berm is valuable in reducing wave-induced momentary liquefaction, compared with a straight sloped conventional rubble mound breakwater. In particular, a parametric study was carried out by varying the berm geometry in terms of its height and its length, keeping constant the armor layer and the berm porosity, the elastic soil properties, the offshore regular wave conditions, and the water depth. The parametric study among different berm schemes has identified the best berm geometric configuration in attenuating momentary liquefaction occurrences. The parametric study performed by Celli et al. [
13] is based on regular wave assumption, despite random waves always appearing in the real ocean environments.
To date, a few research studies considered the effect of random waves on the soil responses and liquefaction processes. Sumer et al. [
14] investigated the effects of random waves on the displacement of a pipe buried in soil subjected to residual liquefaction. The comparison with regular wave results revealed that the best agreement, concerning the number of waves causing liquefaction, occurred in correspondence of
(if the Rayleigh distribution of wave heights applies) and
. Here,
H and
T are the wave height and wave period of regular waves, respectively.
and
are the significant wave height and the mean zero up-crossing period of random waves, respectively.
is the root-mean-square wave height of the random sea state. Therefore, the best agreement turned out for two different wave trains (i.e., regular and random) characterized by the same energy. Liu and Jeng [
15] developed a semi-analytical solution for the soil response induced by random waves and seabed liquefaction. In particular, the influence of random waves on the soil response was investigated and compared with the corresponding representative regular waves (i.e.,
and
) results. They also carried out a parametric study investigating the effects of the wave height and period, the seabed thickness, the degree of saturation, and the soil permeability on the soil response. Xu and Dong [
16] carried out a numerical study about the liquefaction occurrences due to random waves, by identifying the liquefaction depths through probability distributions. Their results indicate that the liquefaction depth induced by random waves is larger than the one induced by regular waves. The latter was determined by adopting an ensemble approach, calculating the liquefaction depths caused by all possible regular wave heights following the Rayleigh distribution and then determining a representative liquefaction depth. Zhao et al. [
17] developed a poro-elastoplastic numerical model to analyze the random wave-induced liquefaction behaviors of loosely deposited seabed foundations, taking into account both residual and oscillatory soil responses. Their results revealed that the use of monochromatic wave conditions leads to the underestimation of the liquefaction phenomenon.
The aforementioned studies, although underlining how important the use of random wave conditions are in assessing the maximum liquefaction depth and their implications in the design process, did not include the presence of any structure on the soil in their works. In the present study, the momentary liquefaction probability induced by random waves has been investigated in the presence of rubble mound breakwaters with submerged berms. In order to analyze the effects of random waves on the momentary liquefaction phenomena, a comparison with the results concerning the corresponding representative regular wave loading, provided by Celli et al. [
13], has been carried out. In particular, three geometric configurations have been selected (see
Figure 1): a straight sloped conventional rubble mound breakwater without a berm and two rubble mound breakwaters with submerged berms marked by
,
, and
,
, respectively (being
the water depth at the toe of the berm,
the water depth over the berm,
the berm length, and
the wave length at the berm toe). The first one has been considered as the reference configuration. This allows for evaluating if the introduction of a submerged berm (i.e., second and third configurations) leads to a reduction of the momentary liquefaction probability under random waves as for regular waves. The second configuration represents the optimal design choice to limit liquefaction phenomena under regular wave conditions, as discussed in Celli et al. [
13]. The third configuration has been selected to further evaluate the liquefaction probability under random waves with a different berm configuration.
It is worth mentioning that several experimental (e.g., [
18]) and numerical (e.g., [
19]) studies revealed no occurrences of momentary liquefaction beneath the breakwater since the overburdened pressure is considerably increased by the structure weight. As for Celli et al. [
13], in the work presented herein, all the wave-induced momentary liquefaction occurrences beneath the breakwaters are due to the discontinuous contact between the soil and the berm rocks, aimed to outline the absence of a transition layer (i.e., bedding layer) under the berm. Then, the results of the present study is useful for the scenario in which the load of the berm rocks is transmitted to the soil only through the contact area (i.e., no transition layer under the berm, see
Figure 2). It can also provide a safe estimation of the transition layer thickness under the berm, if it is taken into account during the design phase.
The features of the present work can be summarized as follows. For different configurations of rubble mound breakwaters with submerged berm, the dynamic seabed pressure induced by random waves has been computed via the open-source numerical model SWASH [
20]. On the other hand, the seabed consolidation state and the response under dynamic wave loading have been evaluated through a poro-elastic soil model discussed in Li et al. [
21] within the OpenFOAM
® framework. A coupling boundary condition (one-way) has been adopted to simulate the interaction between multiple physical phases, including water waves, structure and the seabed. Then, the liquefaction depths induced by random waves have been evaluated and compared with those derived from the regular wave test cases provided by Celli et al. [
13]. The number of random waves required to properly describe the momentary liquefaction occurrences and their magnitude has been investigated as well.
3. Numerical Investigations
According to Celli et al. [
13], the SWASH computational grid spatial resolution has been adopted to accomplish reliable numerical accuracy. For each simulation, the total length of the computational wave domain is equal to 411 m. In the horizontal direction, the cell size is set at 0.2 m. To properly describe the wave frequency dispersion, the computational domain has been divided into three vertical terrain-following layers. The layer thickness, which is the distance between two consecutive layer interfaces, has been defined in an absolute way, by adopting a fixed layer thickness. The sum of the layer thicknesses locally equals the water depth. A water level time series generating random waves is imposed at the offshore side, considered as weakly reflective boundary. For each test, about 625 waves have been simulated (i.e.,
,
being the duration of the simulations). At the onshore side, the Sommerfeld radiation condition (e.g., [
20]) is imposed. The seabed response to the wave-induced seabed pressures has been investigated through an anisotropic poro-elastic soil solver [
21], developed within the OpenFOAM
® framework. A grid convergence study was carried out by Celli et al. [
13], and consequently,
grid points have been used to evaluate the soil response within the study described herein. The seabed domain is 450 m long and 30 m thick. To avoid the effect of the onshore boundary, the domain has been extended of 39 m from the breakwater end. For comparative purporses, the soil porosity
n is set to 0.3 and the saturation factor
is set to 0.975. It should be stressed that a reduction of
may lead to an increased soil portion affected by momentary liquefaction (e.g., [
12,
35]). The anisotropic soil properties are shown in
Table 1. The adopted values for soil permeability (i.e.,
= 0.005 m/s and
= 0.001 m/s) are typical of medium/coarse sand, to which this study refers. Within the seabed domain, the adopted boundary conditions read as follows:
- (1)
at the structure–seabed and wave–seabed interfaces, the traction in the soil is zero. The effective soil stresses vanish. Therefore, the pore pressure equals the dynamic pressure acting on the aforementioned interfaces;
- (2)
at the lateral boundaries and at the bottom of the seabed, the normal pore pressure gradient is zero, the soil skeleton being allowed to slip.
The soil responses and liquefaction depths in the vicinity of a breakwater with submerged berms in regular waves were obtained by Celli et al. [
13], considering waves characterized by
m and
s. In order to compare the soil responses induced by regular and random waves, equivalent wave parameters (i.e., wave period and wave height) between the regular and random wave conditions should be chosen.
In the present study, similar to Liu and Jeng [
36] (which considered
,
), the offshore spectral wave height (
) and the peak period (
) of irregular waves are used as representative regular wave parameters:
=
H = 4 m (being
= 4
;
=
if deep water conditions apply);
=
T = 8 s. According to Rayleigh distribution,
≃ 1.6
,
≃ 1.2
≃ 0.93
(for JONSWAP-type spectra with a peak enhancement factor
= 3.3 ), where
and
are the mean wave height and the mean wave period of random waves, respectively (e.g., [
37]). Then, in comparison with Liu and Jeng [
36], the representative regular waves selected in the present study share the wave height definition (i.e.,
=
). On the other hand, a longer wave period is considered (
≃ 1.07
).
The time-series of surface elevation, derived synthesizing a JONSWAP spectrum with
, is illustrated in
Figure 5.
4. Results and Discussion
As an example, in
Figure 6, the wave-induced transient pore pressure is depicted along with the seepage flow at t = 1281.6 s, for the rubble mound breakwater without a submerged berm (i.e., first configuration).
For the depicted random wave train, the magnitude of dynamic seabed pressure relies on the amplitude of the single wave crest and trough. As expected, wave crests cause positive transient pore pressure, whilst the transient pore pressure becomes negative under wave troughs. In the same vein, the direction of the seepage flow is related to the wave phases (e.g., [
38]). When the upward pore pressure gradient exceeds the vertical initial effective stress, the momentary soil liquefaction will take place, potentially affecting the structure stability. When the seepage force is oriented downward, the seabed does not liquefy since it causes a higher contact effective stresses in the soil [
38].
In order to take into account the stress increase in the seabed due to the structure gravitational load, the liquefaction criterion adopted by Zen and Yamazaki [
9], expressed by:
has been modified as follows:
where
is the initial vertical effective stress related to the gravitational forces from the consolidation phase. The criterion was already used in the works of Zhao et al. [
17], Sui et al. [
39], Li et al. [
21], and Celli et al. [
13]. The wave-induced soil liquefaction occurrences are strongly influenced by the consolidation status, which is experienced by the soil after the breakwater construction, under the hydrostatic water pressure and the structure weight. Therefore, the vertical effective stresses
equilibrium distribution reached by the seabed foundation after the consolidation process has been pre-assessed and then used as the initial condition for the momentary liquefaction analysis.
Figure 7 shows the distribution in the soil of the initial vertical effective stresses
, at the end of the consolidation phase for the simulated test case with
= 0.19 and
= 0.35. A negative value of
represents the compression of the soil skeleton. The higher (absolute) values of
appear under the breakwater. In addition,
Figure 7 reveals a compressive (i.e., negative) stress concentration in two zones: at the core–berm interface and at the end of the breakwater. This is due to the different distributions of gravitational load between the core and the submerged berm and also between the loaded and unloaded zones at the end of the structure.
After the assessment of the initial vertical effective stress distributions for the three configurations depicted in
Figure 1, the criterion outlined by Equation (
9) has been applied for both random and regular wave loads.
Figure 8 (upper panel) shows the maximum liquefaction depths for a straight sloped rubble mound breakwater without a berm, under the actions of regular and random waves, respectively.
The middle and the lower panels show the maximum liquefied depths induced by regular and random waves, respectively. In particular, the areas have been split into two zones: the internal subareas (i.e., cyan zones) show the maximum liquefaction depths beneath the structure, whilst the external ones (i.e., blue zones) show the maximum liquefaction depths ahead of the structure, down to the breakwater toe. In each subarea, the maximum local depth has been evaluated along with the mean local depth (i.e., resulting from the subarea value divided by its superficial length). From the inspection of the middle and the lower panels, it turns out that the maximum internal liquefaction subarea induced by random waves is about
greater than the one induced by regular waves. The maximum internal liquefaction depth (henceforth referred to as
) is equal to 2 m for the random wave loads, about
greater than the regular wave case. In front of the structure, the maximum external liquefaction depth (henceforth referred to as
) reaches about 1 m if random wave loads are considered, equivalent to a reduction of about 30% compared to the regular wave case. For both wave load types, the internal mean maximum value (hereinafter referred to as
) is greater than the external one (i.e.,
), confirming that for a rubble mound breakwater without a berm, the most prone zone to the momentary liquefaction is the area below the armor layer. The liquefaction is even more severe under the armor layer if random wave loads are considered (i.e.,
). It could be hence particularly useful to evaluate if also under random wave actions, the presence of submerged berms tends to attenuate momentary liquefaction occurrences. In this regard,
Figure 9 presents the maximum liquefaction depths concerning a rubble mound breakwaters with two submerged berm configurations, characterized by
,
(right panels) and
,
(left panels), respectively, under the action of regular (middle panels) and random (lower panels) waves. The fluctuating momentary liquefaction trend under the berm, particularly evident in the middle right panel of
Figure 9 is due to the discontinuous contact between the soil and the berm rocks. Due to the rock arrangement, loaded zones (i.e., below the rocks) and unloaded zones (i.e., areas between two closely rocks) occur, as shown in
Figure 2. In the contact area, the weight of the rocks increases the vertical effective stresses, decreasing the liquefaction probability. On the contrary, the existence of unloaded zones leads to a greater possibility of soil liquefaction in comparison with the loaded areas.
From the comparison between the lower panels of
Figure 8 and
Figure 9, it clearly appears how the submerged berms deployment reduces the momentary liquefaction depth, even if random waves are considered. Indeed, the lower berm characterized by
(right panel) shows a drop of
down to 1.49 m, corresponding to a decrease of about
in comparison to a straight sloped conventional breakwater. It should be noted that the maximum liquefied area for the conventional rubble mound breakwater of
Figure 8 is lower than the liquefied areas of
Figure 9 concerning rubble mound breakwaters with submerged berm. This is because the contact length between the seabed and the structure increases as the berm grows in length. However, as already outlined in Celli et al. [
13], this does not mean an increase of potential structure failure of the breakwater core.
Looking again at the lower panels of
Figure 9, differences of
between the two configurations characterized by the same ratio of
and different values of
are observed. In particular, for the lower berm (right panels),
is reduced about
. Therefore, as already found in Celli et al. [
13] for the regular wave case, even under random wave loading, the berm characterized by
reveals the capability in reducing the momentary liquefaction occurrences. This attributes to the right compromise between the initial vertical effective stress reduction and the seabed pore pressure attenuation, typically for this kind of berm configuration.
Focusing on the comparison among middle and lower panels of
Figure 9, it shows how, under random wave loading, the effect of random waves (lower panels) modify the liquefied areas as compared to that under regular waves. The liquefaction depths can be regarded as a stochastic variable. Hence, numerical results can be further examined by using the Empirical Cumulative Distribution Function (i.e., ECDF). In order to investigate the effects of random waves on momentary liquefaction as compared to the regular waves, the ECDF of the percentiles of liquefaction depths has been evaluated for both the berm configurations.
Figure 10 (upper panels) shows the percentiles of momentary liquefaction depths
(where
i represents the percentile) induced by regular waves, for the two rubble mound breakwaters with submerged berms characterized by
(left panels) and
(right panels), respectively.
Regardless of the selected configurations, it appears that the momentary liquefaction depths induced by regular waves are almost the same values for different considered percentiles. This is not surprising since the wave regularity entails that, in each point of the seabed, momentary liquefaction depths vary periodically, achieving almost the same maximum values over the time. The lower panels of
Figure 10 present the percentiles of the momentary liquefaction depths induced by random waves, as well as the maximum momentary liquefaction depths induced by regular waves, for the two different berm configurations. In
Figure 10, it appears that a similar trend of liquefaction depth along the
x-axis under random waves to that under regular waves is obtained. However, the maximum momentary liquefaction depths induced by random waves are larger than the ones induced by regular waves, i.e.,
due to irregular waves are greater than
due to regular waves. Therefore, using representative regular wave parameters, i.e.,
,
to assess the momentary liquefaction probability will lead to an underestimation of the liquefaction depth in the real ocean conditions. Although using the representative regular wave condition can reduce a large amount of computational time, a safer design should hence be based on the estimation of momentary liquefaction induced by random waves.
In order to properly describe the momentary liquefaction occurrences and their magnitude induced by random waves, it is important to know the optimal number of random waves that should be simulated. In this study, for each configuration, about 625 waves have been reproduced according to the water level time-history depicted in
Figure 5. To evaluate if the reproduced number of waves suffices or would have been reduced, the values of the maximum liquefaction depths as a function of the simulated number of waves have been calculated for each tested configuration. The liquefaction depths have been detected where they assume the maximum data value, i.e., at x ≃ 322 m for both the configurations, as illustrated in upper panels of
Figure 9. Within time series of liquefaction depth, temporal windows of different duration (i.e., 200 s, 500 s, 1000 s, 1500 s, 2000 s, 3000 s, 4000 s, 5000 s) have been identified. By moving each time window over the single time series, a dataset of maximum liquefaction depth has been calculated for each window duration, i.e., for a specific number of individual waves (e.g., 200 s are equal to about 25 individual waves). From each dataset, the mean values and the standard deviations of maximum liquefaction depth have then been evaluated. The results are shown in
Figure 11, where in the blue boxes the percent differences with respect to the maximum liquefaction depth achieved for 625 waves (square markers) are indicated. Through the use of gray vertical bars, the standard deviation is also depicted. From both the panels,
Figure 11 shows how the convergence has been reached for each configuration. Moreover, it is evident that it is important to consider a sufficient number of waves. For example, in the lower panel of
Figure 11, if 125 waves were considered, an underestimation of the liquefaction depth equal to about 18 cm would have been achieved. With the aim to strike the right balance between the accuracy of the results and the involved computational time, by observing both the panels, it appears that 375 random waves should be reproduced at least. If 375 random waves were considered, the computational time would have been saved and an underestimation of only 2% (upper panel) and 3.3% (lower panel) would have been achieved, for the submerged berms characterized by
and
, respectively.