41
Exercise K - Stability of an Earth Dam
Objective
The continuing safety of an earth dam structure depends on the stability of its slopes.
The stability of the slope is in turn dependent on:
1. the properties of the material of which the dam is constructed;
2. whether it is 'exposed' to water or air; and
3. on conditions of seepage through the dam.
This experiment is to demonstrate the process of collapse of an improperly designed
earth dam with slopes too steep for the material used. At the same time it may be
noticed how the water itself adjusts a dam's surface to the steepest slope allowable
for given conditions. This slope is called the critical slope.
Equipment Set Up
A segment of an earth dam is formed out of moist sand in the middle of the tank with
slopes as steep as the material permits, the overflow pipes being adjusted as in
Exercise B - Seepage Through an Earth Dam
.
Water is poured into the lower pool and, after it has reached the top of the overflow,
the input is transferred into the upper pool and maintained at a moderate rate. The
rising water level in the upper pool will gradually undercut the upstream slope of the
dam and level it out into its "critical slope".
At the same time the increasing rate of seepage will start washing away sand
particles at the toe of the downward slope, depositing them at a critical slope.
It should be noticed that the upstream and the downstream critical slopes are
different, the upstream slope being steeper.
This difference is due to the variant contributions to stability of the hydrodynamic
pressure of the penetrating water. Upstream the water exerts pressure on the dam