Armourstone

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Armourstone along the sea wall south of Dawlish Warren (UK)

Armourstone is a generic term for broken stone with stone masses between 100 and 10,000 kilograms (220 and 22,050 lb) (very course aggregate) and is suitable for use in hydraulic engineering. Dimensions and characteristics are laid down in European Standard EN13383.[1]

Stone classes[]

Distribution HMA and HMB
Distribution LMA and LMB
Distribution CP

Armourstone is available in standardised stone classes, which are described by a lower and an upper value of the stone mass in these classes. Class 60-300 means that up to 10% of the stones are lighter than 60 kg (130 lb) and up to 30% of the stones are heavier than 300 kg (660 lb). The standard also gives values that cannot be exceeded by 5% or 3%.

For specific use as a top layer for a breakwater or bank protection, the size of the median stone mass, the M50, is often required. This is a category A stone. This does not apply to category B stone. There are two groups, divided into classes HM and LM (Heavy and Light). Thus, a stone class is defined according to EN 13383 as, for example, HMA300-1000. Attached graphs give an overview of all stone classes. Any distribution between the two indicated curves meets the requirements for category B; In addition, in order to comply with category A, the W50 must pass through the small horizontal line.

In addition, a stone class CP (Coarse) has been defined. The class CP is smaller than LM, although the name suggests otherwise. This is because this class is identical to the coarse class in the standard for fractional stone as a supplemental material (aggregate). In the stone class CP, the class is not indicated by kg, but in mm. On the basis of the basic information from standard EN13383, the following table can be drawn up:

Class name range for the M50 (kg) range for the d50 (cm) ratio d85/d16 calculation value for dn50 (cm) layer thickness (1.5 dn50) (cm) minimum dumping quantity with a layer thickness 1.5 dn50 (kg/m²)
CP45/125 0.4 - 1.2 6.3 - 9.0 2.8 6.4 20 300
CP63/180 1.2 - 3.8 9.0 - 12.5 2.8 9.0 20 300
CP90/250 3.1 - 9.3 12.5 - 18 2.8 12.8 20 300
CP45/180 0.4 - 1.2 6.3 - 9.0 4.0 6.4 20 300
CP90/180 2.1 - 2. 11 - 12 2.0 9.7 20 300
LMA5-40 10 - 20 1 8 - 23 1.7 17 25 500
LMA10-60 20 - 35 23 - 28 1.5 21 32 550
LMA40-200 80 - 120 37 - 42 1.5 34 52 850
LMA60-300 120 - 190 42 - 49 1.5 38 57 950
LMA15-300 45 - 135 30 - 44 2.7 31 46 700
HMA300-1000 450 - 690 65 - 75 1.4 59 88 1325
HMA1000-3000 1700 - 2100 102 - 110 1.4 90 135 2050
HMA3000-6000 4200 - 4800 138 - 144 1.2 118 177 2700
HMA6000-10000 7500 - 8500 167 - 174 1.2 144 216 3250

Median stone mass M50[]

Stone sample of 50 stones
Distribution of the weights of the 50 stones

For fine-grained materials such as sand, the size is usually given by the median diameter, which is determined by seven of the sand. It is not possible to make a sieve curve for water building blocks, the stones are too large to sieve. This is why the M50 is used. This is determined by taking a sample of stones, and by determining the mass of each stone and by sorting these masses by size and making a cumulative mass curve. In this curve you can read the M50. Note that the term median stone mass is factually incorrect, it is not true that the stone with mass M50 is also the middle stone of the sample.

As an example, a sample of 50 stones from a quarry in Bulgaria. The blue rectangle has size A4. All stones are individually weighed, and their mass is plotted in attached graph. Horizontal is the individual stone mass, and vertically the cumulative mass as a percentage of the total mass of the sample. At 50% the M50 can be read, this is 24kg. The real median of this sample is the average mass of stone 25 + 26. In this particular example the M50 is accidentally nearly equal to the median mass (26kg). This sample satisfies the requirements for LMA5-40 (apart from the fact that the sample is too small, according to EN13383 such a sample must consist of at least 200 stones). [1]

Nominal diameter[]

Since many design formulas do not contain a stone mass but a diameter, it is necessary to establish a conversion method. This is the nominal diameter, this is the size of a rib of a cube with the same weight as the stone, so

[2]

Usually the median value is also used for this: dn50. In general, the relation can be used for conversion:

[3]

where Fs is the shape factor. By the way, the shape factor varies quite a bit, the range is between 0.7 and 0.9.

For the above example from Bulgaria, the dn50 has also been determined. Since the density of the local stone (a limestone) is 2284 kg/m³, the dn50 is 22 cm. Notice that the sample’s stone size appears to be much larger visually. That’s because there’s a couple of big stones in it that gives a wrong impression.

Other parameters[]

Standard EN13383 describes many more parameters that capture the quality of armoustone, such as a shape parameter (Length/Thickness), resistance to breakage, water absorption capacity[4] etc. It is important to realise that the standard indicates how to define the quality of armourstone, but not what quality is required for a particular application. The latter is contained in design manuals and design guidelines, such as the Rock Manual.[2]

Determination of required stone weight[]

To calculate the required weight under the influence of waves, the (outdated) Hudson Formula or the Van der Meer formula can be used. For calculation of the stone weight in flow, the Izbash formula is recommended. [2]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b EN 13383 Armourstone. various national standardisation institutes (like BSI, NNI, DIN). 2002. p. 73.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c CIRIA, CUR, CETMEF (2007). The rock manual: the use of rock in hydraulic engineering. London: CIRIA C683. pp. 1268 p. ISBN 9780860176831.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Jansen, Laura (2014). Ratio between stone diameter and nominal diameter. TU Delft, comm. on hydraulics 2014-01.
  4. ^ Hudec, Peter P. (1989). "Durability of Rock as Function of Grain Size, Pore Size, and Rate of Capillary Absorption of Water". Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering. 1 (1).
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