Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
304281 | Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering | 2013 | 12 Pages |
The kinematic bending of single piles in two-layer soil is explored to account for soil stiffness degradation and associated damping increase with increasing levels of shear strain, a fundamental aspect of soil behaviour which is not incorporated in current simplified seismic design methodologies for pile foundations.A parametric study of a vertical cylindrical pile embedded in a two-layer soil profile to vertically-propagating S waves, carried out in the time domain by a pertinent beam-on-dynamic-Winkler-foundation (BDWF) model, is reported. Strain effects are treated by means of the equivalent-linear procedure which provides soil stiffness and damping ratio as function of shear strain level. Whereas the approach still represents a crude representation of the actual soil behaviour to dynamic loading, it is more realistic than elementary solutions based on linear visco-elasticity adopted in earlier studies.The paper highlights that soil nonlinearity may have either a detrimental or a beneficial effect on kinematic pile bending depending on the circumstances. The predictive equations for kinematic pile bending in visco-elastic soil recently developed by the Authors are extended to encompass strain effects. Numerical examples and comparisons against experimental data from case histories and shaking table tests are presented.
► Kinematic pile bending is explored accounting for soil strain dependence. ► Strain effects are treated by means of the equivalent-linear procedure. ► Numerical examples and comparisons against experimental data are presented. ► Soil nonlinearity may be detrimental or beneficial for kinematic pile bending. ► Previous predictive equations are extended to encompass soil strain effects.