2011
DOI: 10.3328/ijge.2011.05.03.267-281
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Influence of slope geometry and nail parameters on the stability of soil-nailed slopes

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Cited by 17 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…In Fig. 5a for slopes having 45° of inclination, the optimum nail inclination (β opt ) was in a range between 10º and 20° and it was consistent with the previous studies by Lin et al [16] and Rotte et al [20]. In Fig.…”
Section: Effect Of Nail Inclinationsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…In Fig. 5a for slopes having 45° of inclination, the optimum nail inclination (β opt ) was in a range between 10º and 20° and it was consistent with the previous studies by Lin et al [16] and Rotte et al [20]. In Fig.…”
Section: Effect Of Nail Inclinationsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…In previous studies about soil nails, many researchers have used various methods to study the effectiveness of soil nail on slope stability. Particularly, limit equilibrium method (LEM), finite element method (FEM), and finite different method (FDM) are the common techniques to analyze slope stability.LEM is currently the typical stability analysis and still has been used widely in recent research [8,11,13,20,25]. The result from those studies showed that the factor of safety initially increased with the increase of nail inclination until reaching the optimum inclination angle and then steadily decreased.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In this study, a FEM computer program will be used to analyze and evaluate twoand three-dimensional unreinforced and soil-nailed reinforced slopes. Specifically, the work in this study extends the two-dimensional work performed in the published literature (Rotte et. al., 2011;Wanstreet, 2007;Fan and Luo, 2007;Griffiths and Lane, 1999).…”
Section: Traditional Slope Stabilizing Techniquessupporting
confidence: 76%
“…In the reference [23] studied the influence of slope geometry and nail parameters on the stability of soil-nailed slopes and they obtain that mobilization of axial forces in nails significantly depends on its inclination with respect to the slip surface. They said that nails inserted at the bottom portion of the slope primarily develop tensile forces whereas the nails inserted at the upper portion of the slope develop compressive forces.…”
Section: State Of the Art Of Nailed Soil Slopes Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%