Use of Centrifuge and Numerical Modeling in Design of Pier 400 at the Port of Los Angeles

Author(s):  
Kanthasamy K. Muraleetharan ◽  
Kandiah Arulmoli ◽  
Richard C. Wittkop ◽  
John E. Foxworthy

Port of Los Angeles (POLA) is involved in the creation of 235 ha (580 acres) of new land called Pier 400 by dredging and landfilling behind rock dikes. Because of the complicated nature of the project, POLA chose a fully coupled, elastoplastic, dynamic finite-element code called DYSAC2 as part of the seismic design of Pier 400. The predictions made by DYSAC2 were first validated using dynamic centrifuge model tests. Centrifuge model tests consisting of gravel dikes retaining sand backfills overlying stratified foundation soils also provided insight into the expected deformation mechanisms of Pier 400 cross sections. Centrifuge models indicated that the dikes will move more or less as a rigid block with most of the lateral deformations being concentrated in the foundation soils. These observations were confirmed by analyses of centrifuge models and Pier 400 cross sections using DYSAC2. Because of the rigid body movement of the dikes, a hybrid analysis procedure, between simplified Newmark’s method and the DYSAC2 analysis procedure in sophistication, was developed for the lateral deformation calculations of the Pier 400 cross sections. The hybrid method is similar to Newmark’s method, but yield acceleration values are calculated using average excess pore pressures predicted by DYSAC2 in the foundation soils and the landfill. In essence, the Pier 400 design team and POLA used results from sophisticated fully coupled procedures and centrifuge model tests together with traditional embankment analysis techniques and engineering judgment to produce a viable and safe seismic design of Pier 400 dikes and landfill.

2014 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 2583-2606 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heon-Joon Park ◽  
Dong-Soo Kim ◽  
Yun Wook Choo

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-167 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hitoshi Yatsumoto ◽  
Yasuo Mitsuyoshi ◽  
Yasuo Sawamura ◽  
Makoto Kimura

2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z.J. Westgate ◽  
D.J. White ◽  
M.F. Randolph

Subsea pipelines are becoming an increasingly significant element of offshore hydrocarbon developments as exploration moves into deep-water environments further from shore. During the lay process, pipelines are subject to small amplitude vertical and horizontal oscillations, driven by the sea state and lay vessel motions. Centrifuge model tests have been used to simulate these small-amplitude lay effects, with varying degrees of idealization relative to the real lay process. In the soft soils found in deep water, pipe embedment can exceed a diameter or more, thus significantly affecting the lateral pipe–soil interaction, axial resistance, and thermal insulation. In this paper, results from centrifuge model tests are used to calibrate a model for calculating the dynamic embedment of a subsea pipeline. The model uses elements of plasticity theory to capture the effects of combined vertical and horizontal loading, and incorporates the softening of the surrounding soil as it is remoulded due to the pipeline motions. Influences from the lay rate, lay geometry, and sea state are included in the calculation process. The model is compared with observed as-laid pipeline embedment data from field surveys at three different offshore sites. Using site-specific soil parameters obtained from in situ testing and idealized pipe loads and motions to represent the load and displacement patterns during offshore pipe-laying, respectively, the model is shown to capture well the final as-laid embedment measured in the field surveys.


2007 ◽  
Vol 01 (03) ◽  
pp. 233-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
SUBHADEEP BANERJEE ◽  
SIANG HUAT GOH ◽  
FOOK HOU LEE

The behavior of pile foundations under earthquake loading is an important factor affecting the performance of structures. Observations from past earthquakes have shown that piles in firm soils generally perform well, while the performance of piles in soft or liquefied ground can raise some questions. Centrifuge model tests were carried out at the National University of Singapore to investigate the response of pile-soil system under three different earthquake excitations. Some initial tests were done on kaolin clay beds to understand the pure clay behavior under repetitive earthquake shaking. Pile foundations comprising of solid steel, hollow steel and hollow steel pile filled with cement in-fill were then embedded in the kaolin clay beds to study the response of clay-pile system. Superstructural inertial loading on the foundation was modeled by fastening steel weight on top of the model raft. The model test results show that strain softening and stiffness degradation feature strongly in the behaviour of the clay. In uniform clay beds without piles, this is manifested as an increase in resonance periods of the surface response with level of shaking and with successive earthquakes. For the pile systems tested, the effect of the surrounding soft clay was primarily to impose an inertial loading onto the piles, thereby increasing the natural period of the piles over and above that of the pile foundation alone. There is also some evidence that the relative motion between piles and soil leads to aggravated softening of the soil around the pile, thereby lengthening its resonance period of the soil further. The centrifuge model tests were back-analyzed using the finite element code ABAQUS. The analysis shows that the simple non-linear hypoelastic soil model gave reasonably good agreement with the experimental observations. The engineering implication arising from this study so far is that, for the case of relatively short piles in soft clays, the ground surface motions may not be representative of the raft motion. Other than the very small earthquakes, the raft motion has a shorter resonance period than the surrounding soil.


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