Sjotroll
Geotechnical
- Jan 2, 2018
- 29
Hi all, please help me understand something.
I'm making numerical calculations of a construction pit with cantilever embedded walls in normally consolidated soil. Let us assume that the largest lateral wall movement will occur at the top of the wall. Now, which constitutive models can/should be used to simulate this situation?
First of all, the question is: which modulus applies in the soil behind the wall - is it the primary loading modulus, or the unloading modulus? By a simplified mental check, a soil element behind the wall will see an increase in deviatoric stress and a decrease in mean stress.
The soil under the excavation is obviously under unloading conditions, and let's say that in all of the analyses this soil is modeled with a linear Mohr-Coulomb model using the unloading modulus.
What model can we use for the top soil?
1) I could use the linear Mohr-Coulomb model with unloading modulus. This, however, gives a deformation trend where the max. lateral deformation is not at the top of the wall, but it complies with the idea that the soil behind the wall is in an unloading state.
2) I could use the linear Mohr-Coulomb model with primary loading modulus. This gives a better looking trend, but only due to the large ratio between the unloading modulus of the bottom soil and the primary loading modulus of the top soil. On top of that, the soil is not really under loading conditions, so a primary loading modulus seems off.
3) I could use the Duncan-Chang model. To simplify, let's assume that the moduli are constant within the soil at rest (not dependent on confining stress). The model then says that the primary loading modulus reduces with increase in mobilized strength (or with axial strain), while the unloading modulus is constant (not strain dependent). This model gives a great looking trend. However, as we saw previously, the soil element behind the wall experiences an increase in deviatoric stress, which means that the Duncan-Chang model thinks it is under primary loading and uses that modulus - which, as I also mentioned previously, show not be correct. If it used the unloading modulus, since it is constant and not depended on strain, the result would probably be equal to the linear Mohr-Coulomb model with unloading modulus. Thus, one of my questions is also: is the unloading modulus really independent of strains?
4) I could use Hardening soil model. This is a little more complicated, but again let us assume that the moduli are independent of confining stress. This model also uses practically the same hyperbolic relationship as the Duncan-Chang model for the primary loading modulus E50. The rest of the used modli (Eoed and Eur) can only be dependent on confining stress, but as mentioned in our case they are constant. The E50 is used when the loading is mostly by deviatoric stress, and Eoed when it is mostly by mean stress, but uses the same Eur for any unloading-reloading. Thanks to the yield surface it uses, it can detect unloading and reloading when the combination of deviatoric and mean stress stays within the surface. According to this, it should be able to detect the unloading that's happening behind the wall, which would then again be equal to using Mohr-Coulomb model with unloading modulus, but instead I get a good looking deformation trend, like with the previous model, but with even larger deformations. The only explanation I could get to is that it doesn't detect unloading, and continues to calculate with the E50 which is reducing according to the hyperbolic relationship. The question here is then: why doesn't the Hardening soil model detect unloading? And if it did, I assume it would be the same as using the Mohr-Coulomb with unloading modulus (which, as previously discussed, doesn't give good trends).
So, what would be an appropriate method of modeling this situation? Am I making some wrong assumptions regarding the lateral deformation trends of cantilever embedded walls, or about any of the models, or perhaps the stress state behind the wall? Perhaps the only thing left that would make sense for me is to lift the assumption of confining-stress-independency and instead make Eur increase with confining stress (~depth), which would make the soil respond softer near the top, and stiffer near the bottom, which should improve the trends - but is this property really so crucial?
Regards
I'm making numerical calculations of a construction pit with cantilever embedded walls in normally consolidated soil. Let us assume that the largest lateral wall movement will occur at the top of the wall. Now, which constitutive models can/should be used to simulate this situation?
First of all, the question is: which modulus applies in the soil behind the wall - is it the primary loading modulus, or the unloading modulus? By a simplified mental check, a soil element behind the wall will see an increase in deviatoric stress and a decrease in mean stress.
The soil under the excavation is obviously under unloading conditions, and let's say that in all of the analyses this soil is modeled with a linear Mohr-Coulomb model using the unloading modulus.
What model can we use for the top soil?
1) I could use the linear Mohr-Coulomb model with unloading modulus. This, however, gives a deformation trend where the max. lateral deformation is not at the top of the wall, but it complies with the idea that the soil behind the wall is in an unloading state.
2) I could use the linear Mohr-Coulomb model with primary loading modulus. This gives a better looking trend, but only due to the large ratio between the unloading modulus of the bottom soil and the primary loading modulus of the top soil. On top of that, the soil is not really under loading conditions, so a primary loading modulus seems off.
3) I could use the Duncan-Chang model. To simplify, let's assume that the moduli are constant within the soil at rest (not dependent on confining stress). The model then says that the primary loading modulus reduces with increase in mobilized strength (or with axial strain), while the unloading modulus is constant (not strain dependent). This model gives a great looking trend. However, as we saw previously, the soil element behind the wall experiences an increase in deviatoric stress, which means that the Duncan-Chang model thinks it is under primary loading and uses that modulus - which, as I also mentioned previously, show not be correct. If it used the unloading modulus, since it is constant and not depended on strain, the result would probably be equal to the linear Mohr-Coulomb model with unloading modulus. Thus, one of my questions is also: is the unloading modulus really independent of strains?
4) I could use Hardening soil model. This is a little more complicated, but again let us assume that the moduli are independent of confining stress. This model also uses practically the same hyperbolic relationship as the Duncan-Chang model for the primary loading modulus E50. The rest of the used modli (Eoed and Eur) can only be dependent on confining stress, but as mentioned in our case they are constant. The E50 is used when the loading is mostly by deviatoric stress, and Eoed when it is mostly by mean stress, but uses the same Eur for any unloading-reloading. Thanks to the yield surface it uses, it can detect unloading and reloading when the combination of deviatoric and mean stress stays within the surface. According to this, it should be able to detect the unloading that's happening behind the wall, which would then again be equal to using Mohr-Coulomb model with unloading modulus, but instead I get a good looking deformation trend, like with the previous model, but with even larger deformations. The only explanation I could get to is that it doesn't detect unloading, and continues to calculate with the E50 which is reducing according to the hyperbolic relationship. The question here is then: why doesn't the Hardening soil model detect unloading? And if it did, I assume it would be the same as using the Mohr-Coulomb with unloading modulus (which, as previously discussed, doesn't give good trends).
So, what would be an appropriate method of modeling this situation? Am I making some wrong assumptions regarding the lateral deformation trends of cantilever embedded walls, or about any of the models, or perhaps the stress state behind the wall? Perhaps the only thing left that would make sense for me is to lift the assumption of confining-stress-independency and instead make Eur increase with confining stress (~depth), which would make the soil respond softer near the top, and stiffer near the bottom, which should improve the trends - but is this property really so crucial?
Regards