Theoretical Analysis of Subgrade Deformation of Deep Foundations of Super High-Rise Buildings

Author(s):  
Xiangfu Chen
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-103
Author(s):  
Bousbia Nawel ◽  
Messast Salah ◽  
Houssou Noura

Abstract The construction and loading of deep foundations (piles) of high-rise buildings causes a considerable effect in terms of stresses and deformation and requires assessing their impact on the response of adjacent tunnels to deformations, particularly for pile foundations, which are often constructed in locations very close to existing tunnels. The execution process for piles structures generates displacements, stresses, and forces, which are transferred through the piles’ soil surrounding a nearby existing tunnel. The research presented in this paper has led to a significantly improved understanding of pile-tunnel interaction problem. It is crucial for the analysis of the impact of the pile construction on an existing tunnel. The treated topic appears in a setting of an urban environment, where we construct numerous profound foundations, sometimes in contact or adjacent to a. In this paper, the response of the existing tunnel under constructed pile process is studied. Numerical modeling was carried out using Plaxis3D software in which the Mohr-Coulomb Model (MC) has been used for modeling, while the piles/ tunnels are modeled as a linear elastic material. Furthermore, a parametric study is conducted, and its cases are investigated. The displacements and the stresses generated on the tunnel lining decreases with the increase in relative distance between pile and tunnel (spacing), the location/length of the pile from the tunnel, the pile diameter, the number of piles. We have also identified two geometrical parameters of the tunnel: shape section and thickness lining which play a prominent role in the interaction between an existing tunnel and a new pile to excavate.


Author(s):  
A. Gómez ◽  
P. Schabes-Retchkiman ◽  
M. José-Yacamán ◽  
T. Ocaña

The splitting effect that is observed in microdiffraction pat-terns of small metallic particles in the size range 50-500 Å can be understood using the dynamical theory of electron diffraction for the case of a crystal containing a finite wedge. For the experimental data we refer to part I of this work in these proceedings.


2001 ◽  
Vol 84 (7) ◽  
pp. 27-36
Author(s):  
Aki Yuasa ◽  
Daisuke Itatsu ◽  
Naoki Inagaki ◽  
Nobuyoshi Kikuma

1997 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 118-124
Author(s):  
Geoffrey Hall

Patients who have undergone several sessions of chemotherapy for cancer will sometimes develop anticipatory nausea and vomiting (ANV), these unpleasant side effects occurring as the patients return to the clinic for a further session of treatment. Pavlov's analysis of learning allows that previously neutral cues, such as those that characterize a given place or context, can become associated with events that occur in that context. ANV could thus constitute an example of a conditioned response elicited by the contextual cues of the clinic. In order to investigate this proposal we have begun an experimental analysis of a parallel case in which laboratory rats are given a nausea-inducing treatment in a novel context. We have developed a robust procedure for assessing the acquisition of context aversion in rats given such training, a procedure that shows promise as a possible animal model of ANV. Theoretical analysis of the conditioning processes involved in the formation of context aversions in animals suggests possible behavioral strategies that might be used in the alleviation of ANV, and we report a preliminary experimental test of one of these.


Author(s):  
Steven A. Lavender ◽  
Jay P. Mehta ◽  
Glenn E. Hedman ◽  
Sanghyun Park ◽  
Paul A. Reichelt ◽  
...  

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