Flash-flood hyperpycnal flows generating shallow-water landslides at Fiumara mouths in Western Messina Strait (Italy)

2011 ◽  
Vol 32 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 257-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Casalbore ◽  
F. L. Chiocci ◽  
G. Scarascia Mugnozza ◽  
P. Tommasi ◽  
A. Sposato
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Martina Pierdomenico ◽  
Daniele Casalbore ◽  
Francesco Latino Chiocci

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pelagiya Belyakova ◽  
Ekaterina Vasil'eva ◽  
Andrey Aleksyuk ◽  
Vitaly Belikov ◽  
Boris Gartsman ◽  
...  

<p>In the Russian part of Western Caucasus heavy rainfall episodes frequently occur, leading to flash floods that often cause fatalities and severe damage. As soon as climate change is expected to increase the risk of flash floods it is necessary to improve flood forecasting and flood risk mapping as well as other precautionary measures. For this scope the better knowledge of catchment response on heavy precipitation is needed using rainfall-runoff simulation and further hydrodynamic modelling of inundation of urbanized areas.</p><p>There is a number of models used for flash flood simulation. In this study we used an available unit hydrograph model KW-GIUH [1] and a hydrodynamic model STREAM 2D CUDA [2]. KW-GIUH model only schematically describes overland flow over the catchment, nonlinear character of response is introduced via kinematic-wave approximation of the travel time. STREAM 2D CUDA is based on numerical solution of shallow water equations in a two-dimensional formulation according to the original algorithm using the exact solution of the Riemann problem [2], due to which the calculation is performed for the entire catchment without special allocation of the channel network. Models were tested on several flash flood events on the river Adagum (6-7 July 2012, catastrophic flood in the Krymsk town) and the Zapadny Dagomys river (25 June 2015, 24-25 October 2018, Sochi).</p><p>Comparison of simulation results was done as the same input data set was used. Input data included DEM HydroSHEDS, measured hourly precipitation and runoff volumes observed on gauges and estimated after high-water marks. Also 10-min water levels from a regional automated flood monitoring system of the Krasnodar Territory were applied. Simulated runoff volumes and peak timing were analyzed. For the Zapadny Dagomys river a forecasting calculation was done using precipitation forecast from COSMO-Ru. For the Adagum river STREAM 2D CUDA allowed to conduct an experiment to assess possible effect from potential reservoir-traps in the tributaries. The results of the rainfall-runoff simulation by the KW-GIUH model can be used as inflow to the boundary of the area for hydrodynamic modeling using STREAM 2D CUDA, also for operational use. Scenario calculations with changing hydraulic conditions at the catchment can be simulated using the STREAM 2D CUDA model itself.</p><p>The flood simulation was supported by the Russian Science Foundation under grant №17-77-30006. Data processing from an automated flood monitoring system in the Krasnodar Territory is funded by Russian Foundation for Basic Research and the Krasnodar Territory, grant № 19-45-233007.</p><p>References:</p><ol><li>Lee K.T., Cheng N.K., Gartsman B.I., Bugayets A.N. (2009): A current version of the model of a unit hydrograph and its use in Taiwan and Russia, Geography and Natural Resources, Volume 30, issue 1, pp. 79–85. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gnr.2009.03.015</li> <li>Aleksyuk A.I., Belikov V.V. (2017): Simulation of shallow water flows with shoaling areas and bottom discontinuities, Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, Volume 57, issue 2, pp. 318–339. https://doi.org/10.1134/S0965542517020026</li> </ol>


10.29007/kh16 ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ester Marafini ◽  
Franziska Tügel ◽  
Ilhan Özgen ◽  
Reinhard Hinkelmann ◽  
Michele La Rocca

Severe and sudden events like flash floods are considered to be one of the most hazardous environmental disasters. Therefore, predicting the whole process of flooding is fundamental to prevent urban damages. In this context, the simulation of flash floods is an important tool to analyse the flow processes in order to find solutions to the problem. In this work, a case study of the flash flood event of 9th March 2014 in the city of El Gouna in Egypt was carried out using the Hydroinformatics Modeling System (hms), a two-dimensional (2D) shallow water model developed at the Chair of Water Resources Management and Modeling of Hydrosystems, Technische Universität Berlin. The flooding processes are simulated in great detail on unstructured grids. The aim of this work is to investigate the flow field around the settlement of the study area, when structures such as storage basins and dams are adopted as protection measures for the city. Different scenarios are analyzed to find out the most suitable one, which is able to minimize the risk during the flash flood event.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 7117-7132
Author(s):  
Geoffroy Kirstetter ◽  
Olivier Delestre ◽  
Pierre-Yves Lagrée ◽  
Stéphane Popinet ◽  
Christophe Josserand

Abstract. The French Riviera is very often threatened by flash floods. These hydro-meteorological events, which are fast and violent, have catastrophic consequences on life and property. The development of forecasting tools may help to limit the impacts of these extreme events. Our purpose here is to demonstrate the possibility of using b-flood (a subset of the Basilisk library http://basilisk.fr/, last access: 8 November 2021), which is a 2D tool based on the shallow-water equations and adaptive mesh refinement. The code is first validated using analytical test cases describing different flow regimes. It is then applied to the Toce river valley physical model produced by ENEL-HYDRO in the framework of the CADAM project and on a flash-flood case over the urbanized Toce area produced during the IMPACT project. Finally, b-flood is applied to the flash flood of October 2015 in Cannes in south-eastern France, which demonstrates the feasibility of using software based on the shallow-water equations and mesh refinement for flash-flood simulation in small watersheds (less than 100 km2) and on a predictive computational timescale.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffroy Kirstetter ◽  
Olivier Delestre ◽  
Pierre-Yves Lagrée ◽  
Stéphane Popinet ◽  
Christophe Josserand

Abstract. The French Riviera is very often threatened by flash floods. These hydro-meteorological events, which are fast and violent, have catastrophic consequences on life and properties. The development of forecasting tools may help to limit the impacts of these extreme events. Our purpose here is to demonstrate the possibility of using b-flood (a subset of the Basilisk library http://basilisk.fr/) which is a 2D tool based on the shallow water equations and adaptive mesh refinement. The code is first validated on analytical test cases describing different flow regimes. It is then applied on the Toce river valley physical model produced by ENEL-HYDRO in the framework of the CADAM project and on a flash flood case over the urbanized Toce produced during the IMPACT project. Finally, b-flood is applied on the flash flood of October 2015 on Cannes city in south-east France, which demonstrates the feasibility of using a software based on the shallow water equations and mesh refinement for flash flood simulation on small watersheds (less than 100 km2) and on predictive computational time scale.


2018 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 06018
Author(s):  
Finn Amann ◽  
Ilhan Özgen ◽  
Morgan Abily ◽  
Jiaheng Zhao ◽  
Dongfang Liang ◽  
...  

After three hours of intense rainfall, the city of Nice was flash flooded on October 3, 2015, resulting in casualties and severe damages in property. This study presents a porous shallow water-model based numerical simulation of the flash flood event in a district of Nice, and compares the results with a high-resolution conventional shallow water model. This contribution aims to discuss practical aspects of applying a porous shallow water model to a real world case. The porous shallow water model is an integral porosity-type shallow water model. It uses unstructured triangular meshes. The conventional shallow water model is a distributed memory parallelized high-performance computing code, that uses a uniform Cartesian grid. The study site is an approximately 5 km2 spanning district of the city of Nice, France. Topography information is available in a 1m resolution and in addition, the available digital elevation model includes inframetric structures such as walls and small bridges. In the presentation of the case study, challenges of the pre-processing step of the integral porosity shallow water model are addressed. Notably, a method to semi-automatically generate “good” triangular meshes using the open-source geoinformation system QGIS and the mesh generator Gmsh is presented. During the post-processing step, the results of the porous model are mapped back onto the high-resolution topography to make the results more meaningful. The agreement between the high-resolution reference solution and the porous model results are poor. A speed up of about 10 to 15 was observed for the present case.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Qiuhua ◽  
Yan Xiong ◽  
Gang Wang

<p>Under climate change, extreme weather events such as storms and intense rainfall has become far more frequent. This is evidenced by the outburst of multiple flood events in the recent years in the UK and other parts of the world. Induced by intense rainfall, flash flooding is one type of wide-spread natural hazards that can pose serious threats to people’s lives and properties. Most likely happening in steep rapid-response catchments following localized high intensity rainfall, flash floods are characterized by rapid rise of water level and high flow velocities in channels and floodplains. The violent flood waves can remove and transport heavy objects such as cars and tree, imposing extra risk to people and infrastructure, e.g. bridges.</p><p>On 16<sup>th</sup> August 2004, the coastal village of Boscastle in north Cornwall, UK, was devastated by a flash flood following an exceptional amount of rain that fell over eight hours. The village suffered extensive damage and notably, some 100 vehicles were washed to downstream and into the sea, some of which blocked bridges and altered flood hydraulics. This work aims to reproduce the flood event including floating debris dynamics using a new coupled hydrodynamic model. The coupled modelling tool predicts the flooding process using a finite volume shock-capturing model that solves the fully 2D shallow water equations (SWEs), which is coupled with a discrete element model (DEM) to simulate the interactive dynamics of floating objects. The coupled model is further accelerated by implementation on modern GPUs and is therefore well-suited for simulation of large-scale transient flood hydrodynamics enriched with floating debris. The simulation results are first confirmed by comparing with maximum flood depths collected after the event. Further simulations are carried out to investigate the influence of floating vehicles on flood hydrodynamics and understand how they block bridges and alter flood paths. The simulation results are consistent with observations captured during the event.</p><p><strong>Key Words</strong>: Flash flooding; Hydrodynamic model; Shallow water equations; Discrete element model; Floating debris</p>


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