Active Earth Pressure of Finite Width Soil Considering Intermediate Principal Stress and Soil Arching Effects

Author(s):  
Hui Liu ◽  
Dezhi Kong
2012 ◽  
Vol 170-173 ◽  
pp. 755-761 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen Biao Liang ◽  
Jun Hai Zhao ◽  
Yan Li ◽  
Chang Guang Zhang ◽  
Su Wang

Based on the unified solution of shear strength in terms of double stress state variables for unsaturated soils, whilst considering the effect of the intermediate principal stress rationally, the unified solution of Coulomb’s active earth pressure for unsaturated soils without cracks is developed. Comparability of the solution is analyzed and influencing characteristic of each factor is obtained. The research result indicates that: the intermediate principal stress and matric suction have obvious impacts on Coulomb’s active earth pressure for unsaturated soils; Coulomb’s active earth pressure has been decreasing until zero with the increase of unified strength theory parameter and matric suction; Coulomb’s active earth pressure increases with the increase of grading angle of retaining wall and slop angle of backfill, but decreases with the increase of matric suction, effective internal friction angle and matric suction angle, while external friction angle has no obvious influence. The proposed unified solution of Coulomb’s active earth pressure enjoys a wider application, and unified solution of Rankine’s active earth pressure is just the special case. The results are of great significance to soil pressure determination such as slope and foundation pit, and to retaining structures design.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Weidong Hu ◽  
Kangxing Liu ◽  
Xinnian Zhu ◽  
Xiaolong Tong ◽  
Xiyu Zhou

The horizontal differential layer element method was used to study the active earth pressure of the finite-width soil formed by the rigid retaining wall for the embankment or adjacent foundation pits. The cohesionless soil was taken as the research object, and the soil arch theory was introduced based on the translation mode of rigid retaining wall and the linear sliding fracture surface. The minor principal stress line was assumed as circular, considering the deflected principal stress as soil arching effect. The shear stress between level soil layers in the failure wedge was calculated, and the differential level layer method was modified. Then, the theoretical formula of the active earth pressure, the resultant earth pressure, and the point of application of resultant earth pressure were obtained using this revised method. The predictions by the proposed formula were compared with the existing methods combined with the cases. It is shown that the resultant finite pressure increases gradually and approaches to Coulomb active earth pressure values when the soil is infinite, with the increase of the ratios of the backfill width to height. Moreover, the horizontal pressure for limited soils is distributed nonlinearly along the wall height. Considering the shear stress between level soil layers and the soil arching effect, the position of application point of the resultant active earth pressure by the proposed formulation is higher than that of Coulomb’s solution. The wall is rougher, and the resultant pressure will be smaller. The application point distance from the bottom of the wall will increase. Finally, an experiment was conducted to verify the distribution of the active earth pressure for finite soil against rigid retaining wall, and the research results agree well with those of the experimented observations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 169
Author(s):  
Hui Liu ◽  
Dezhi Kong ◽  
Wensong Gan ◽  
Bingjie Wang

The traditional method for seismic earth pressure calculation has certain limitations for retaining structures under complex conditions. For example, when the soil width is small, the results obtained by the traditional method will be much larger. Therefore, this paper assumes that the soil slip surface is a logarithmic spiral. Based on the plane strain unified strength theory formula, while also considering the soil arching effects and tension cracks, the analytical solutions of the lateral earth pressure coefficient and the active earth pressure under the earthquake action were deduced. The mechanism and distribution of seismic active earth pressure with limited width were discussed in terms of some relevant parameters. The results indicated that the seismic active earth pressure presented a “convex” nonlinear distribution along the retaining structure. As the contribution of the intermediate principal stress increased, the strength limit of the material was effectively utilized, and the earth pressure was reduced by 22.96%. The resultant force increased as the horizontal seismic coefficient increased. However, this effect was no longer evident when the wall–soil friction angle was close to the internal friction angle. The resultant force action point increased with the wall–soil friction angle, and it should be noted that ha>H/3 was true when δ/φ0>0.55. Finally, by drawing a comparison with previous studies, we verified that the method proposed in this paper is reasonable and can provide a new idea for subsequent 3D seismic earth pressure research.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 3243
Author(s):  
Meilin Liu ◽  
Xiangsheng Chen ◽  
Zhenzhong Hu ◽  
Shuya Liu

For c-φ soil formation (cohesive soil) of limited width with ground surface overload behind a deep retaining structure, a modified active earth pressure calculation model is established in this study. And three key issues are addressed through improved soil arching effect. First, the soil-wall interaction mechanism is determined by considering the soil arching effect. The slip surface of a limited soil is proved to be a double-fold line passing through the retaining wall toe and intersecting the side wall of the existing underground structure until it reaches the ground surface along the existing side wall. Second, the limited width boundary is explicated. And third, the variation in the active earth pressure from parameters of limited c-φ soil is determined. The lateral active earth pressure coefficient is nonlinear distributed based on the improved soil arching effect of the symmetric catenary curve. Furthermore, the active earth pressure distribution, the tension crack at the top of the retaining wall and the resultant force and its action point were obtained. By comparing with the existing analytical methods, such as the Rankine method, it demonstrates that the model proposed in this study is much closer to the measured and numerical results. Ignoring the influence of soil cohesion and the limited width will exponentially reduce the overall stability of the retaining structure and increase the risk of accidents.


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