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1.
Soil movements associated with slope instability induce shear forces and bending moments in stabilizing piles that vary with the buildup of passive pile resistance. For such free-field lateral soil movements, stress development along the pile element is a function of the relative displacement between the soil and the pile. To investigate the effects of relative soil-pile displacement on pile response, large-scale load tests were performed on relatively slender, drilled, composite pile elements (cementitious grout with centered steel reinforcing bar). The piles were installed through a shear box into stable soil and then loaded by lateral translation of the shear box. The load tests included two pile diameters (nominal 115 and 178?mm) and three cohesive soil types (loess, glacial till, and weathered shale). Instrumentation indicated the relative soil-pile displacements and the pile response to the loads that developed along the piles. Using the experimental results, an analysis approach was evaluated using soil p-y curves derived from laboratory undrained shear strength tests. The test piles and analyses helped characterize behavioral stages of the composite pile elements at loads up to pile section failure and also provided a unique dataset to evaluate the lateral response analysis method for its applicability to slender piles.  相似文献   

2.
This paper demonstrates the application of the strain wedge (SW) model to assess the response of laterally loaded isolated long piles, drilled shafts, and pile groups in layered soil (sand and/or clay) and rock deposits. The basic goal of this paper is to illustrate the capabilities of the SW model versus other procedures and approaches. The SW model has been validated and verified through several comparison studies with model- and full-scale lateral load tests. Several factors and features related to the problem of a laterally loaded isolated pile and pile group are covered by the SW model. For example, the nonlinear behavior of both soil and pile material, the soil-pile interaction (i.e., the assessment of the p-y curves rather than the adoption of empirical ones), the potential of soil to liquefy, the interference among neighboring piles in a pile group, and the pile cap contribution are considered in SW model analysis. The SW model analyzes the response of laterally loaded piles based on pile properties (pile stiffness, cross-sectional shape, pile-head conditions, etc.) as well as soil properties. The SW model has the capability of assessing the response of a laterally loaded pile group in layered soil based on more realistic assumptions of pile interference as compared to techniques and procedures currently employed or proposed.  相似文献   

3.
Although most designers prefer the p-y curve method as compared to elastic continuum or finite-element analysis of laterally loaded pile behavior, the profession has reached a state where it is time that closer scrutiny be given to the traditional “Matlock-Reese” p-y curves used in the analysis. The traditional p-y curves were derived from a number of well-instrumented field tests that reflect a limited set of conditions. To consider these p-y curves as unique is questionable. As important as such curves have been to advancing the practice from elastic to nonlinear beam on elastic foundation analysis, such calibrated∕verified p-y curves reflect the specific field test conditions (particularly the pile properties) encountered. As presented in this paper, there are additional influences such as pile bending stiffness, pile cross-sectional shape, pile-head fixity, and pile-head embedment that have an effect on the resulting p-y curves. It is argued that strain wedge (SW) model formulation can be used to characterize such effects. SW model analysis predicts the response of laterally loaded piles and has shown very good agreement with actual field tests in sand, clay, and layered soils. The advantage of the SW model is that it is capable of taking into account the effect of changes in soil and pile properties on the resulting p-y curves.  相似文献   

4.
This paper presents results from a study of the dynamic response of pile foundations in liquefying sand during seismic loading. The study included a series of dynamic centrifuge tests of pile-supported structures and the back-calculation of time histories for the lateral resistance p and relative displacement y between a pile and the free-field soil. Details of the centrifuge experiments and the procedures used to back-calculate p and y time histories are described. The back-calculated p-y time histories provide a concise representation of the experimental results and can be compared to the equivalent p-y behavior predicted by soil-pile interaction analysis methods. The observed p-y behavior provides insight into the mechanisms of soil-pile interaction in liquefying sand, showing characteristics that are consistent with the undrained cyclic loading behavior of saturated sand, including the effects of relative density, cyclic degradation, pore-pressure generation, prior displacement (strain) history, and phase transformation behavior.  相似文献   

5.
Wedge Failure Analysis of Soil Resistance on Laterally Loaded Piles in Clay   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A fundamental study of pile-soil systems subjected to lateral loads in clay soil was conducted by using experimental tests and a lateral load-transfer approach. The emphasis was on an improved wedge failure model developed by considering three-dimensional combination forces and a new hyperbolic p-y criterion. A framework for determining the p-y curve on the basis of both theoretical analysis and experimental load test results is proposed. The proposed p-y method is shown to be capable of predicting the behavior of a large-diameter pile under lateral loading. The proposed p-y curves with an improved wedge model are more appropriate and realistic for representing a pile-soil interaction for laterally loaded piles in clay than the existing p-y method.  相似文献   

6.
Full-scale testing of a large pile group is economically not feasible. A concept based on a periodic boundary has been used to study lateral behavior of a large pile group. The approach and findings from anchorage design of a major suspension bridge in California are presented here. Using the repeating nature of soil's displacement field within infinite number of piles arranged in a regular grid pattern, soil-pile interaction phenomenon from the finite area enclosed by one periodic soil boundary effectively represents behavior of the entire pile group. A 3D finite-element analysis was used to create the soil-pile models in which the boundary conditions mimic the repeating nature of the infinite number of piles by slaving the boundary nodes. The soil resistance, as calculated from the finite-element method employing the periodic boundary, is compared with the empirical p-y curve approach for a single isolated pile to determine the group effects. Values of p-multiplier and y-multiplier have been obtained for different pile spacings.  相似文献   

7.
This paper presents results of full-scale lateral load tests of one single pile and three pile groups in Hong Kong. The test piles, which are embedded in superficial deposits and decomposed rocks, are 1.5 m in diameter and approximately 30 m long. The large-diameter bored pile groups consist of one two-pile group at 6 D (D = pile diameter) spacing and one two-pile and one three-pile group at 3 D spacing. This paper aims to investigate the nonlinear response of laterally loaded large-diameter bored pile groups and to study design parameters for large-diameter bored piles associated with the p-y method using a 3 D finite-element program, FLPIER. Predictions using soil parameters based on published correlations and back-analysis of the single-pile load test are compared. It is found that a simple hyperbolic representation of load-deflection curves provides an objective means to determine ultimate lateral load capacity, which is comparable with the calculated values based on Broms' theory. Lateral deflections of bored pile groups predicted using the values of the constant of horizontal subgrade reaction, suggested by Elson and obtained from back-analysis of the single pile load test, are generally in good agreement with the measurements, especially at low loads.  相似文献   

8.
Undrained Lateral Pile Response in Sloping Ground   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Three-dimensional finite element analyses were performed to study the behavior of piles in sloping ground under undrained lateral loading conditions. Piles of different diameter and length in sloping cohesive soils of different undrained shear strength and several ground slopes were considered. Based on the results of the finite element analyses, analytical formulations are derived for the ultimate load per unit length and the initial stiffness of hyperbolic p-y curves. New p-y criteria for static loading of piles in clay are proposed, which take into account the inclination of the slope and the adhesion of the pile-slope interface. These curves are used through a commercial subgrade reaction computer code to parametrically analyze the effect of slope inclination and pile adhesion on lateral displacements and bending moments. To validate the proposed p-y curves, a number of well documented lateral load tests are analyzed. Remarkable agreement is obtained between predicted and measured responses for a wide range of soil undrained shear strength and pile diameter, length, and stiffness.  相似文献   

9.
This paper examines seven case histories of load tests on piles or drilled shafts under lateral load. Since the current design software to estimate lateral load resistance of deep foundations requires p-y curves. The first approach used was correlative whereby soil parameters determined from in situ tests [standard penetration test (SPT) and cone penetration test (CPT)] were used as input values for standard p-y curves. In the second approach p-y curves were calculated directly from the stress deformation data measured in dilatometer (DMT) and cone pressuremeter tests. The correlative evaluation revealed that, on the average, predictions based upon the SPT were conservative for all loading levels, and using parameters from the CPT best predicted field behavior. Typically, predictions were conservative, except at the maximum load. Since traditionally SPT and CPT correlation-based p-y curves are for “sands” or “clays,” this study suggests that silts, silty sands, and clayey sands should use cohesive p-y curves. For the directly calculated curves, DMT derived p-y curves predict well at low lateral loads, but at higher load levels the predictions become unconservative. p-y curves derived from pressuremeter tests predicted well for both “sands” and “clays” where pore pressures are not anticipated.  相似文献   

10.
The behavior of pile foundations subjected to horizontal loading is typically evaluated using horizontal load tests. Although load tests are valuable to understand site-specific soil-structure interaction phenomena, validated predictive methods are also useful during the design phase. In this study, the results from horizontal load tests are compared with methods which predict the horizontal bearing capacity of piles using in situ measurements of soil behavior. Specifically, several horizontal load tests were performed in order to evaluate the behavior of two 12-m long Strauss piles and four bored piles with similar length, all installed in a lateritic soil profile. Two prediction methods were evaluated using p-y curves computed from the results of Marchetti’s dilatometer test (DMT) results. The predictive methods using the p-y curves from the DMT showed good agreement with the behavior observed in the pile loading test.  相似文献   

11.
In this paper, inelastic pile–soil interaction is analyzed by using a hybrid type of numerical method. Piles are modeled as linear finite elements and the soil half-space is modeled using boundary elements. Inelastic modeling of the soil media is introduced by a rational approximation to a continuum with nonlinear interface springs along the piles. For this purpose, a modified ?zdemir’s nonlinear model is implemented and systems of equations are coupled for piles and pile groups at interacting nodes. To verify the proposed algorithm, three experimental results from previously conducted tests on piles under static axial and lateral loads are compared with those obtained from the present analysis.  相似文献   

12.
In this paper, a finite-element model is developed in which the nonlinear soil behavior is represented by a hyperbolic relation for static load condition and modified hyperbolic relation, which includes both degradation and gap for a cyclic load condition. Although batter piles are subjected to lateral load, the soil resistance is also governed by axial load, which is incorporated by considering the P-Δ moment and geometric stiffness matrix. By adopting the developed numerical model, static and cyclic load analyses are performed adopting an incremental-iterative procedure where the pile is idealized as beam elements and the soil as elastoplastic spring elements. The proposed numerical model is validated with published laboratory and field pile test results under both static and cyclic load conditions. This paper highlights the importance of the degradation factor and its influence on the soil resistance-displacement (p-y) curve, number of cycles of loading, and cyclic load response.  相似文献   

13.
Simplified Approach for the Seismic Response of a Pile Foundation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Pseudostatic approaches for the seismic analysis of pile foundations are attractive for practicing engineers because they are simple when compared to difficult and more complex dynamic analyses. To evaluate the internal response of piles subjected to earthquake loading, a simplified approach based on the “p-y” subgrade reaction method has been developed. The method involves two main steps: first, a site response analysis is carried out to obtain the free-field ground displacements along the pile. Next, a static load analysis is carried out for the pile, subjected to the computed free-field ground displacements and the static loading at the pile head. A pseudostatic push over analysis is adopted to simulate the behavior of piles subjected to both lateral soil movements and static loadings at the pile head. The single pile or the pile group interact with the surrounding soil by means of hyperbolic p-y curves. The solution derived first for the single pile, was extended to the case of a pile group by empirical multipliers, which account for reduced resistance and stiffness due to pile-soil-pile interaction. Numerical results obtained by the proposed simplified approach were compared with experimental and numerical results reported in literature. It has been shown that this procedure can be used successfully for determining the response of a pile foundation to “inertial” loading caused by the lateral forces imposed on the superstructure and “kinematic” loading caused by the ground movements developed during an earthquake.  相似文献   

14.
This paper presents experimental results and analysis of six model centrifuge experiments conducted on the 150?g-ton Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute centrifuge to investigate the effect of soil permeability on the response of end-bearing single piles and pile groups subjected to lateral spreading. The models were tested in a laminar box and simulate a mild infinite slope with a liquefiable sand layer on top of a nonliquefiable layer. Three fine sand models consisting of a single pile, a 3×1 pile group, and a 2×2 pile group were tested, first using water as pore fluid, and then repeated using a viscous pore fluid, hence simulating two sands of different permeability in the field. The results were dramatically different, with the three tests simulating a low permeability soil developing 3–6 times larger pile head displacements and bending moments at the end of shaking. Deformation observations of colored sand strips, as well as measurements of sustained negative excess pore pressures near the foundations in the “viscous fluid” experiments, indicated that an approximately inverted conical zone of nonliquefied soil had formed in these tests at shallow depths around the foundation, which forced the liquefied soil in the free field to apply its lateral pressure against a much larger effective foundation area. Additional p-y and limit equilibrium back-analyses support the hypothesis that the greatly increased foundation bending response observed when the soil is less pervious is due to the formation of such inverted conical volume of nonliquefied sand. This study provides evidence of the importance of soil permeability on pile foundations response during lateral spreading for cases when the liquefied deposit reaches the ground surface, and suggests that bending response may be greater in silty sands than in clean sands in the field. Moreover, the observations in this study may serve as basis for realistic practical engineering methods to evaluate pile foundations subjected to lateral spreading and pressure of liquefied soil.  相似文献   

15.
The importance of long-term behavior in integral abutment (IA) bridges has long been recognized. This paper presents an analytical, long-term, response prediction methodology using finite-element (FE) models and compares results to measured response. Three instrumented Pennsylvania IA bridges have been continuously monitored since November 2002, November 2003, and September 2004 to capture bridge response. An evaluation of measured responses indicates that bridge movement progresses year to year with long-term response being significant with respect to static predictions. Both two-dimensional and three-dimensional FE models were developed using ANSYS to determine an efficient and accurate analysis level. Seasonal cyclic ambient temperature and equivalent temperature derived from time-dependent strains using the age adjusted effective modulus method were employed as major loads in all FE models. The elastoplastic p-y curve method, classical earth pressure theory, and moment-rotation relationships with parallel unloading paths were used to model hysteretic behavior of soil-pile interaction, soil-abutment interaction, and abutment-to-backwall connection. Predicted soil pressures obtained from all FE models are similar to the measured response. Predicted abutment displacements and corresponding design forces and moments at the end of the analytically simulated 100-year period indicate the significance of long-term behavior that should be considered in IA bridge design.  相似文献   

16.
Laterally spreading nonliquefied crusts can exert large loads on pile foundations causing major damage to structures. While monotonic load tests of pile caps indicate that full passive resistance may be mobilized by displacements on the order of 1–7% of the pile cap height, dynamic centrifuge model tests show that much larger relative displacements may be required to mobilize the full passive load from a laterally spreading crust onto a pile group. The centrifuge models contained six-pile groups embedded in a gently sloping soil profile with a nonliquefied crust over liquefiable loose sand over dense sand. The nonliquefied crust layer spread downslope on top of the liquefied sand layer, and failed in the passive mode against the pile foundations. The dynamic trace of lateral load versus relative displacement between the “free-field” crust and pile cap is nonlinear and hysteretic, and depends on the cyclic mobility of the underlying liquefiable sand, ground motion characteristics, and cyclic degradation and cracking of the nonliquefied crust. Analytical models are derived to explain a mechanism by which liquefaction of the underlying sand layer causes the soil-to-pile-cap interaction stresses to be distributed through a larger zone of influence in the crust, thereby contributing to the softer load transfer behavior. The analytical models distinguish between structural loading and lateral spreading conditions. Load transfer relations obtained from the two analytical models reasonably envelope the responses observed in the centrifuge tests.  相似文献   

17.
A procedure for exploiting a two-dimensional (2D) explicit, numerical computer code for the 3D formulation of dynamic lateral soil-pile interactions is considered. The procedure is applied to two models using simultaneous computation of a series of plane strain boundary value problems, each of which represents a horizontal layer of soil. The first model disregards the shear forces developed between the horizontal layers, and may be considered as a generalized Winkler model. The second model takes account of these forces by coupling the behavior of the horizontal layers. Several verification problems for a single pile and pile groups in a homogeneous soil layer modeled as a viscoelastic material were solved and compared to known solutions in order to assess the reliability of the models. Excellent agreement was observed between results of the present analyses and existing solutions.  相似文献   

18.
This paper presents an assessment of the potential of using the p–y analysis method for single piles and pile groups subjected to lateral spreading. The computed responses were compared with the results from the full-scale lateral spreading tests in Japan as presented in the Part I companion paper. The responses of the single piles subjected to lateral spreading were determined by imposing the known free-field soil movement profile to the Winkler spring model. The soil springs of nonliquefied soils used in this study were based upon standard p–y springs whereas zero spring stiffness was used for liquefied soils. For the case of pile groups, they were modeled as an equivalent single pile with a rotational spring at the pile head to simulate effect of pile head restraint. A decrease of soil spring stiffnesses using the p-multiplier approach was used to account for pile group effects. Based on the results of analyses, the computed responses of all sets of the test piles using a single set of baseline soil properties were in good agreement with the measured responses. These results suggest that the p–y analysis method may be used to estimate the behavior of piles subjected to lateral spreading.  相似文献   

19.
This paper discusses the variation of the P-multiplier (Pm) used with the p-y curve to assess the response of a pile group under lateral loads, which is a crucial topic for the design of bridge pile foundations. Pm is influenced by the site geotechnical conditions (i.e., soil profile, type and properties), pile front and side spacings, and pile-group deflection. The presented study shows the needs to incorporate these factors with the recommended sets of Pm to avoid any compromise or uncertainty when Pm is treated as a single (unique) value based only on pile spacings. The current study addresses these influential elements using the strain wedge (SW) model technique, suggested Pm values, and data collected from full-scale pile-group load tests. The experimental results show that Pm is not unique and must be assessed based on the site geotechnical conditions along with the pile-row front and side spacings. Because the employed Pm values must be a function of these influential factors, additional full- and model-scale load tests with different pile spacings and soil types might be required. The paper also emphasizes that using other techniques, such as the SW model, in addition to the P-multiplier could increase the confidence in the predicted pile-group lateral response.  相似文献   

20.
This paper describes the results of a model testing of the piles embedded in Nak-Dong River sand, located in south Korea, under monotonic lateral loadings. A number of features were studied, including the lateral resistance of piles, the effect of the installation method, and the pile head restraint condition. The study has led to recommendations of the load–transfer curves (p–y curves) for laterally loaded piles. Modification factors were developed to allow for both a different pile installation method and different pile head restraint conditions by comparison to existing model load tests. The proposed p–y curves were compared to the existing curves and were evaluated with the experimental data. The ultimate lateral soil resistance and subgrade modulus were investigated and discussed. It is revealed that the proposed p–y curves show significant differences in shapes and magnitudes when compared with existing p–y curve models. The accuracy of the proposed p–y curve model, considering the effect of installation method and pile head restraint condition, is very reasonable as shown by comparing measured and predicted lateral behavior of the pile.  相似文献   

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