GeoPaveTraffic
Geotechnical
- Nov 26, 2002
- 1,557
Hello all, hope everyone's new year is off to a happy and profitable start.
I’m working on a project with one of our west coast offices and the principal in charge of the project wants to use fully softened shear strengths for some slope stability analysis. I’ll hold my opinions on this till the bottom of the post.
A few facts, at least as I understand them since I’m being added to the project team late in the process.
1. Project is a levee in the central valley of California, USA.
2. Levee is constructed primarily of cohesive soils with some sand.
3. Atterberg limits show everything: plastic silt, lean clay and fat clay.
4. Levee height is fairly small, 15 feet or so high with 2.5 to 3 horizontal to 1 vertical slopes.
It has been determined to use Stark, Choi and McCone’s method as presented in the May 2005 ASCE Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering titled Drained Shear Strength Parameters for Analysis of Landslides. While the paper mainly discusses ultimate (residual) strengths it also presents fully softened peak strengths. In rough terms it appears to lower the effective strength of the soils by about 20 percent.
I’m curious if others are typically using this method and what your experience has been.
Now my general thoughts:
1. I agree with the concept discussed in the paper and the need to be cautious when determining strengths for over consolidated clays.
2. However, it seems to me if you are going to refine the strengths that you also need to refine the target factors of safety.
3. If you refine the strengths downward because you have done a “better” job of determining the strengths; then the target factor of safety should also be refined.
4. In my experience very few slopes designed using peak strengths and a factor of safety of 1.5 fail. Those that do fail have typically revealed something in the repair that was not known during the original design or, more commonly, the slope was not constructed as designed.
Thanks to all for your thoughts.
Mike Lambert
I’m working on a project with one of our west coast offices and the principal in charge of the project wants to use fully softened shear strengths for some slope stability analysis. I’ll hold my opinions on this till the bottom of the post.
A few facts, at least as I understand them since I’m being added to the project team late in the process.
1. Project is a levee in the central valley of California, USA.
2. Levee is constructed primarily of cohesive soils with some sand.
3. Atterberg limits show everything: plastic silt, lean clay and fat clay.
4. Levee height is fairly small, 15 feet or so high with 2.5 to 3 horizontal to 1 vertical slopes.
It has been determined to use Stark, Choi and McCone’s method as presented in the May 2005 ASCE Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering titled Drained Shear Strength Parameters for Analysis of Landslides. While the paper mainly discusses ultimate (residual) strengths it also presents fully softened peak strengths. In rough terms it appears to lower the effective strength of the soils by about 20 percent.
I’m curious if others are typically using this method and what your experience has been.
Now my general thoughts:
1. I agree with the concept discussed in the paper and the need to be cautious when determining strengths for over consolidated clays.
2. However, it seems to me if you are going to refine the strengths that you also need to refine the target factors of safety.
3. If you refine the strengths downward because you have done a “better” job of determining the strengths; then the target factor of safety should also be refined.
4. In my experience very few slopes designed using peak strengths and a factor of safety of 1.5 fail. Those that do fail have typically revealed something in the repair that was not known during the original design or, more commonly, the slope was not constructed as designed.
Thanks to all for your thoughts.
Mike Lambert