A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Stability and Failure Geometry of Slopes with Spatially Varying Undrained Shear Strength
The influence of spatial variation in undrained shear strength is an important practical consideration for assessing the stability of excavations or natural slopes. Prior research has focused on slope stability in normally consolidated or lightly overconsolidated clays, commonly assuming that undrained shear strength () increases linearly with depth but remains constant in the horizontal direction. However, depositional history, geologic settings, and variations in groundwater conditions may result in a strength profile that varies vertically and horizontally. A parametric study was performed to determine slope stability considering undrained shear strength that increases linearly with depth but exhibits an initial undrained shear strength at the ground surface that varies over horizontal distance—a relationship defined geometrically by an angle called the profile inclination (). The analyzed solutions are presented through charts of normalized stability numbers (). The results demonstrate that increasing the shear strength gradient increases slope stability, but considerable differences in stability were found between profile inclinations. The importance of the profile inclination is significantly influenced by the observed failure and slope geometry.
Stability and Failure Geometry of Slopes with Spatially Varying Undrained Shear Strength
The influence of spatial variation in undrained shear strength is an important practical consideration for assessing the stability of excavations or natural slopes. Prior research has focused on slope stability in normally consolidated or lightly overconsolidated clays, commonly assuming that undrained shear strength () increases linearly with depth but remains constant in the horizontal direction. However, depositional history, geologic settings, and variations in groundwater conditions may result in a strength profile that varies vertically and horizontally. A parametric study was performed to determine slope stability considering undrained shear strength that increases linearly with depth but exhibits an initial undrained shear strength at the ground surface that varies over horizontal distance—a relationship defined geometrically by an angle called the profile inclination (). The analyzed solutions are presented through charts of normalized stability numbers (). The results demonstrate that increasing the shear strength gradient increases slope stability, but considerable differences in stability were found between profile inclinations. The importance of the profile inclination is significantly influenced by the observed failure and slope geometry.
Stability and Failure Geometry of Slopes with Spatially Varying Undrained Shear Strength
Hossley, Alessandra (author) / Leshchinsky, Ben (author)
2019-03-04
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
Simplified reliability method for spatially variable undrained engineered slopes
British Library Online Contents | 2013
|Undrained Stability of Footings on Slopes
Online Contents | 2011
|Probabilistic stability analyses of undrained slopes with linearly increasing mean strength
Online Contents | 2017
|