Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (Oct 2022)

A Composite Permeable Sloping Seawall for Effective Energy Dissipation: A Quasi-Soft Alternative Solution for Shore Protection

  • Vaishnavi Dabir,
  • Kanchan Khare,
  • Mutukuru Gangireddy Munireddy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse10101423
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. 1423

Abstract

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The recent trend in coastal research centers around environmental sustainability, especially in coastal conservation. A seawall typically has three layers, namely core, filter, and hard rubble/concrete armor. In the current study, a two-layered seawall is proposed, comprising a coir geotextile roll from the coastal regions, along with sand encapsulated in a geotextile over an impermeable core. This can be considered as a quasi-soft solution against the traditional, three-layered, hard alternative. The objective of this study is to investigate the combined effect of slope and porosity, of this composite structure, on the wave reflection. The findings show that the composite structure provides less reflection coefficient values compared to traditional rubble mound seawalls. Four orientations and positions of coir rolls with geosynthetic sandbag were tested. The armor layer with coir rolls overlain by geosynthetic sandbags over an impermeable core could be a better alternative, as it increases the hydrodynamic performance by 59% as compared to sandbags, used alone, over an impermeable core on a slope of 1:2.

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