2017
DOI: 10.1680/jgeot.17.p.096
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Stabilisation of excavated slopes in strain-softening materials with piles

Abstract: The use of a row of discrete vertical piles is an established method, successfully used to remediate failure of existing slopes and to stabilise potentially unstable slopes created by widening transport corridors. This paper challenges the assumptions made in current design procedures for these piles, which treat the pile only as an additional force or moment and simplify soil-pile interaction. Two-dimensional planestrain finite-element analyses were performed to simulate the excavation of a slope in a stiff c… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…There is no indication of deeper-seated movements, either interacting with or developing below the pile row, as seen in 2D finite element analyses of a pile wall stabilised cut slope in clay presented by Summersgill et al, (2018); at Mill Hill the slope inclinometer tubes extend below the toe of the piles, and do not show any displacements forming below the structure.…”
Section: Seasonal Variations In Soil Water Content and Pore Water Prementioning
confidence: 93%
“…There is no indication of deeper-seated movements, either interacting with or developing below the pile row, as seen in 2D finite element analyses of a pile wall stabilised cut slope in clay presented by Summersgill et al, (2018); at Mill Hill the slope inclinometer tubes extend below the toe of the piles, and do not show any displacements forming below the structure.…”
Section: Seasonal Variations In Soil Water Content and Pore Water Prementioning
confidence: 93%
“…(8). Note that several other weight functions have also be proposed in the literature but one in Galavi and Schweiger [7] is found to give the best regularization results for soils with strain softening [28].…”
Section: The Original Constitutive Modelmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In previous studies, some of the state variables affecting the strain-softening and flow rule are assumed to evolve with the nonlocal plastic strain. This is called the partially nonlocal approach [7,28]. Though it is less rigorous than the fully nonlocal method which assume that both stress strain are nonlocal, it is found effective in regularizing most soil models with strain-softening.…”
Section: The Original Constitutive Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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