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Finite element simulation of an excavation-triggered landslide using large deformation theory
Abstract Numerical simulation of an excavation induced landslide in a strain softening material is presented and the results are compared with field measurements. The simulation is based on the methodology proposed to estimate the post-failure deformation of slopes in strain softening materials. The method includes: a) the Updated Lagrangian formulation which is essential in capturing the changing geometry and configuration of the slope during failure, b) a strain softening constitutive model which enables simulation of the progressive failure mechanisms, c) a stable solution scheme to prevent problems associated with numerical convergence in strain softening materials, and d) the h-adaptive mesh refinement technique to prevent excessive distortion of the finite element mesh due to large deformation and to increase the accuracy of the numerical solution. For the slope considered here, it is shown that failure initiated due to the excavation at the toe of the slope and propagated upward due to the strain softening behavior of the geomaterials which eventually led to the progressive failure of this slope. The failure surface is mainly within a thin layer of soil with substantial strain softening behavior but propagates to the surrounding soil as the excavation proceeds. The predicted crest settlement, toe movement, and deformed shape of the slope are lower than the observed behavior of the slope. However, the numerical analysis clearly predicts the triggering factor and the failure mechanism of the landslide and the impact of the large deformation of the soil mass on the houses at the toe of the slope.
Highlights A novel method to estimate the slopes post-failure deformations prone to landslide Post-failure deformations can be used as an indicator of landslides manifestation. Large deformation theory, h-adaptive remeshing and a strain softening constitutive model is combined. Predicted crest settlements show that excavation has impacted houses on slope negatively. Results agree with field observations: failure surface location, sliding soil mass.
Finite element simulation of an excavation-triggered landslide using large deformation theory
Abstract Numerical simulation of an excavation induced landslide in a strain softening material is presented and the results are compared with field measurements. The simulation is based on the methodology proposed to estimate the post-failure deformation of slopes in strain softening materials. The method includes: a) the Updated Lagrangian formulation which is essential in capturing the changing geometry and configuration of the slope during failure, b) a strain softening constitutive model which enables simulation of the progressive failure mechanisms, c) a stable solution scheme to prevent problems associated with numerical convergence in strain softening materials, and d) the h-adaptive mesh refinement technique to prevent excessive distortion of the finite element mesh due to large deformation and to increase the accuracy of the numerical solution. For the slope considered here, it is shown that failure initiated due to the excavation at the toe of the slope and propagated upward due to the strain softening behavior of the geomaterials which eventually led to the progressive failure of this slope. The failure surface is mainly within a thin layer of soil with substantial strain softening behavior but propagates to the surrounding soil as the excavation proceeds. The predicted crest settlement, toe movement, and deformed shape of the slope are lower than the observed behavior of the slope. However, the numerical analysis clearly predicts the triggering factor and the failure mechanism of the landslide and the impact of the large deformation of the soil mass on the houses at the toe of the slope.
Highlights A novel method to estimate the slopes post-failure deformations prone to landslide Post-failure deformations can be used as an indicator of landslides manifestation. Large deformation theory, h-adaptive remeshing and a strain softening constitutive model is combined. Predicted crest settlements show that excavation has impacted houses on slope negatively. Results agree with field observations: failure surface location, sliding soil mass.
Finite element simulation of an excavation-triggered landslide using large deformation theory
Mohammadi, Samaneh (author) / Taiebat, Hossein (author)
Engineering Geology ; 205 ; 62-72
2016-02-26
11 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Finite element simulation of an excavation-triggered landslide using large deformation theory
Online Contents | 2016
|Finite element simulation of an excavation-triggered landslide using large deformation theory
British Library Online Contents | 2016
|Finite element simulation of an excavation-triggered landslide using large deformation theory
British Library Online Contents | 2016
|