Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
304584 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering 2012 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper presents the results of lateral impact load field tests conducted on a near-shore steel pipe pile vibro-driven into soft marine clay. Two series of tests are carried out, the first 1 week and the second 10 weeks after the vibro-driving. The pile is instrumented with an unconventional technique for field tests in marine environment which includes an accelerometer at the pile head, strain gauges and pore pressure transducers along the pile. Instruments are properly protected from marine environment and pile driving installation method. Tests are aimed at investigating the dynamic soil-water-pile interaction and determining the dynamic characteristics of the whole system at very small strain. The obtained results show the complex dynamic behaviour of the vibrating soil-water-pile system in terms of natural frequencies, damping and mode shapes. The variation in the dynamic behaviour in time, due to reconsolidation of soil subsequent to vibro-driving is also discussed. Furthermore, the horizontal dynamic impedance function of the whole system is derived from the experimental data over a wide frequency range and compared with that obtained from a numerical soil–pile interaction model.

► Full-scale lateral impact load tests on a near-shore steel pipe pile. ► Dynamic behaviour of the soil–water–pile system at very low strains. ► Experimental modal analysis to define natural frequencies and damping ratio. ► Experimental soil–water–pile system impedance function over a wide frequency range. ► Effects of soil re-consolidation after vibro-driving.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
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