Hudson's equation explained

Hudson's equation, also known as Hudson formula, is an equation used by coastal engineers to calculate the minimum size of riprap (armourstone) required to provide satisfactory stability characteristics for rubble structures such as breakwaters under attack from storm wave conditions.

The equation was developed by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station (WES), following extensive investigations by Hudson (1953, 1959, 1961a, 1961b)[1] [2] [3]

Initial equation

The equation itself is:

W=

\gammarH3
KD\Delta3\cot\theta

where:

\gammar

is the specific weight of the armor blocks (N/m3)

Updated equation

This equation was rewritten as follows in the nineties:

Hs
\DeltaDn50

=

(KD\cot\theta)1/3
1.27

where:

The armourstone may be considered stable if the stability number Ns = Hs / Δ Dn50 < 1.5 to 2, with damage rapidly increasing for Ns > 3. This formula has been for many years the US standard for the design of rock structures under influence of wave action [4] Obviously, these equations may be used for preliminary design, but scale model testing (2D in wave flume, and 3D in wave basin) is absolutely needed before construction is undertaken.

The drawback of the Hudson formula is that it is only valid for relatively steep waves (so for waves during storms, and less for swell waves). Also it is not valid for breakwaters and shore protections with an impermeable core. It is not possible to estimate the degree of damage on a breakwater during a storm with this formula. Therefore nowadays for armourstone the Van der Meer formula or a variant of it is used. For concrete breakwater elements often a variant of the Hudson formula is used.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hudson , Robert Y. . Laboratory investigation of rubble-mound breakwaters. transaction paper 3213. 1959. ASCE. 25 p.
  2. Book: CIRIA, CUR, CETMEF . 2007. The rock manual : the use of rock in hydraulic engineering . chapter 5. CIRIA C683. London. 9780860176831 . 567–577.
  3. Book: 2011 . Coastal Engineering Manual EM 1110-2-1100, part VI, chapter 5 . US Army Corps of Engineers . 73.
  4. Book: Shore Protection Manual. Vol II. US Army Corps of Engineers. 1984.
  5. Book: CIRIA, CUR, CETMEF . 2007. The rock manual : the use of rock in hydraulic engineering . chapter 5. CIRIA C683. London. 9780860176831 . 585–596.