lateral soil movement
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 5554
Author(s):  
Hamzh Alarifi ◽  
Hisham Mohamad ◽  
Nor Faridah Nordin ◽  
Muhammad Yusoff ◽  
Aminu Darda’u Rafindadi ◽  
...  

Modern countries utilise buried pipelines for the long-distance transportation of water, oil, and gas due to their efficiency and continuity of delivery to receiving locations. Due to soil movements such as landslides, excessive earth pressure imposed on buried pipelines causes damage and, consequently, leaking of liquids, gases or other harmful effluents into the soil, groundwater, and atmosphere. By using a large-scale physical model, the lateral pipeline–soil interaction in sandy soil was researched. This study investigated the stress distribution on a buried pipe induced by lateral soil displacement. The external forces on the buried pipe caused by the surrounding soil motion were measured using earth pressure cells installed in the active zone along the pipeline. Additionally, visual inspection of ground deformation patterns on the surface, including tensile cracks, above a shallow-buried pipeline subjected to lateral soil movement was reported. The results revealed that lateral soil movement has a potency effect on buried pipelines. The findings also indicated that the highest stresses occur at the unstable soil boundaries prior to reaching the soil’s peak strength. After observing the soil surface’s rupture, most of the stress increments were concentrated in the middle section of the pipe.


2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 377-390
Author(s):  
Dongli Zhu ◽  
Buddhima Indraratna ◽  
Harry Poulos ◽  
Cholachat Rujikiatkamjorn

Piles and prefabricated vertical drains (PVDs) are two well-established inclusions used by geotechnical practitioners when dealing with soft compressible foundations. Induced movements in highly compressible soil can adversely influence the pile response by inducing additional movements and stresses in the piles. Especially, undesirable soil–pile interaction often leads to the development of excess pore-water pressure during pile installation and negative skin friction caused by the settlement of compressible soil surrounding the piles. Additional drainage by PVDs prior to the installation of a pile could reduce excess pore-water pressure, lateral soil movement, and negative skin friction on the pile. In this paper, full-scale field testing on two trial embankments built on soft soil is reported and the relative behaviour of these two embankments is compared and discussed. Soft soil underneath both embankments was consolidated before one pile was installed at the centre of each embankment. The pore-water pressure, lateral soil movement, surface settlement, and associated strain at the pile shaft were recorded. The pile capacity was tested immediately and 3 h after pile installation. The monitoring and testing results indicated that preconsolidation with PVDs before piling can effectively reduce the excess pore-water pressure, lateral soil movement, and downdrag on the pile.


Author(s):  
Osamah Al-Salih ◽  
T. T. Sabbagh ◽  
Wisam Alawadi ◽  
I.Q. Al-abboodi

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (3.18) ◽  
pp. 21
Author(s):  
Lee Lin Jye ◽  
Shenbaga R. Kaniraj ◽  
Siti Noor Linda bt Taib ◽  
Fauzan Bin Sahdi

Soft soil conditions with very soft and deep silty clay have constantly endangered the stability of the riverine and estuarine structures in Sarawak. There have been many failures of jetties, wharves and bridges in Sarawak. In many cases of failures, the piles were not designed to resist the lateral movement, unless they were included to stabilize unstable slopes or potential landslides. This practice may be due to reasons such as erroneously judging the river bank as stable in slope stability analysis or simply due to the inexperience of designers. Also, when the river bank approaches the limiting stability in its natural state any construction activity on the river bank could result in lateral soil movement. This paper highlights this important geotechnical problem in Sarawak. Then it presents the details of a few failures of estuarine structures. A review of situations causing lateral loading of piles is then presented. The results of the in-soil and in-pile displacement measurements are shown in this paper and it is found that the computation made to compare between field and 3D modeling is agreeable.  


Geoderma ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 319 ◽  
pp. 142-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beth A. Fisher ◽  
Anthony K. Aufdenkampe ◽  
Kyungsoo Yoo ◽  
Rolf E. Aalto ◽  
Julia Marquard

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