Slope Orientation and Vegetation Effects on Soil Thermo-Hydraulic Behavior. An Experimental Study

The stability and erosion of natural and man-made slopes is influenced by soil-vegetation-atmosphere interactions and the thermo-hydro-mechanical slope conditions. Understanding such interactions at the source of slope mass-wasting is important to develop land-use planning strategy and to promote en...

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Main Authors: Raül Oorthuis, Jean Vaunat, Marcel Hürlimann, Antonio Lloret, José Moya, Càrol Puig-Polo, Alessandro Fraccica
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-12-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/1/14
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spelling doaj-7958b8974a2047dd9dd2e2b0c5330cad2020-12-23T00:03:34ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-12-0113141410.3390/su13010014Slope Orientation and Vegetation Effects on Soil Thermo-Hydraulic Behavior. An Experimental StudyRaül Oorthuis0Jean Vaunat1Marcel Hürlimann2Antonio Lloret3José Moya4Càrol Puig-Polo5Alessandro Fraccica6Division of Geotechnical Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UPC BarcelonaTECH, 08034 Barcelona, SpainInternational Center for Numerical Methods in Engineering, Division of Geotechnical Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UPC BarcelonaTECH, 08034 Barcelona, SpainDivision of Geotechnical Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UPC BarcelonaTECH, 08034 Barcelona, SpainInternational Center for Numerical Methods in Engineering, Division of Geotechnical Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UPC BarcelonaTECH, 08034 Barcelona, SpainDivision of Geotechnical Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UPC BarcelonaTECH, 08034 Barcelona, SpainDivision of Geotechnical Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UPC BarcelonaTECH, 08034 Barcelona, SpainDivision of Geotechnical Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UPC BarcelonaTECH, 08034 Barcelona, SpainThe stability and erosion of natural and man-made slopes is influenced by soil-vegetation-atmosphere interactions and the thermo-hydro-mechanical slope conditions. Understanding such interactions at the source of slope mass-wasting is important to develop land-use planning strategy and to promote environmentally adapted mitigation strategies, such as the use of vegetation to stabilize slopes and control erosion. Monitoring is essential for calibrating and validating models and for better comprehending the physical mechanisms of soil-vegetation-atmosphere interactions. We approached this complex problem by means of an experimental work in a full-scale monitored embankment, which is divided into four instrumented partitions. These partitions are North or South-faced and present a bare and vegetation cover at each orientation. Our main findings show that vegetation enhances rainfall infiltration and decreases runoff, which reduces slope stability and surficial erosion, while plant transpiration induces higher suctions and hence slope stability. Concerning thermal aspects, vegetation reduces the incidence of net solar radiation and consequently heat flux. Thus, daily temperature fluctuations and evaporation decreases. However, the effect of vegetation in the development of dryer soil conditions is more significant than the orientation effect, presenting higher drying rates and states at the North-vegetated slope compared to the South-bare slope.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/1/14embankmentrainfallinfiltrationtemperaturevegetation covermonitoring
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raül Oorthuis
Jean Vaunat
Marcel Hürlimann
Antonio Lloret
José Moya
Càrol Puig-Polo
Alessandro Fraccica
spellingShingle Raül Oorthuis
Jean Vaunat
Marcel Hürlimann
Antonio Lloret
José Moya
Càrol Puig-Polo
Alessandro Fraccica
Slope Orientation and Vegetation Effects on Soil Thermo-Hydraulic Behavior. An Experimental Study
Sustainability
embankment
rainfall
infiltration
temperature
vegetation cover
monitoring
author_facet Raül Oorthuis
Jean Vaunat
Marcel Hürlimann
Antonio Lloret
José Moya
Càrol Puig-Polo
Alessandro Fraccica
author_sort Raül Oorthuis
title Slope Orientation and Vegetation Effects on Soil Thermo-Hydraulic Behavior. An Experimental Study
title_short Slope Orientation and Vegetation Effects on Soil Thermo-Hydraulic Behavior. An Experimental Study
title_full Slope Orientation and Vegetation Effects on Soil Thermo-Hydraulic Behavior. An Experimental Study
title_fullStr Slope Orientation and Vegetation Effects on Soil Thermo-Hydraulic Behavior. An Experimental Study
title_full_unstemmed Slope Orientation and Vegetation Effects on Soil Thermo-Hydraulic Behavior. An Experimental Study
title_sort slope orientation and vegetation effects on soil thermo-hydraulic behavior. an experimental study
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-12-01
description The stability and erosion of natural and man-made slopes is influenced by soil-vegetation-atmosphere interactions and the thermo-hydro-mechanical slope conditions. Understanding such interactions at the source of slope mass-wasting is important to develop land-use planning strategy and to promote environmentally adapted mitigation strategies, such as the use of vegetation to stabilize slopes and control erosion. Monitoring is essential for calibrating and validating models and for better comprehending the physical mechanisms of soil-vegetation-atmosphere interactions. We approached this complex problem by means of an experimental work in a full-scale monitored embankment, which is divided into four instrumented partitions. These partitions are North or South-faced and present a bare and vegetation cover at each orientation. Our main findings show that vegetation enhances rainfall infiltration and decreases runoff, which reduces slope stability and surficial erosion, while plant transpiration induces higher suctions and hence slope stability. Concerning thermal aspects, vegetation reduces the incidence of net solar radiation and consequently heat flux. Thus, daily temperature fluctuations and evaporation decreases. However, the effect of vegetation in the development of dryer soil conditions is more significant than the orientation effect, presenting higher drying rates and states at the North-vegetated slope compared to the South-bare slope.
topic embankment
rainfall
infiltration
temperature
vegetation cover
monitoring
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/1/14
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