Insight into the behavior of a caisson anchor under cyclic loading in calcareous silt
Version 2 2022-11-27, 23:03Version 2 2022-11-27, 23:03
Version 1 2022-10-31, 04:33Version 1 2022-10-31, 04:33
journal contribution
posted on 2022-11-27, 23:03 authored by MA Mohiuddin, MS Hossain, YH Kim, Y Hu, Shah Neyamat UllahShah Neyamat UllahThis paper provides insight into the behavior of a stiffened caisson anchor under inclined cyclic loading in calcareous silt. A series
of tests was conducted in a beam centrifuge. A monotonic test was first performed, quantifying the pure monotonic capacity, and then four
cyclic loading tests varying the mean load, amplitude, and number of cycles. Cyclic soil characterization T-bar tests and caisson tests were
linked. Undrained cyclic T-bar tests led to generate excess pore pressure, resulting in degradation of soil strength and stiffness. For partially
drained cyclic caisson tests, the excess pore pressure generated during initial undrained monotonic loading experienced partial dissipation.
Healing due to consolidation outweighed the damage due to initial pore pressure generation. Postcyclic monotonic capacity was found to be
up to 35% higher compared with the pure monotonic capacity unless the anchor failed during cyclic loading. Measured rotation indicated the
evolution of anchor failure mechanism. Caisson capacity under inclined loading was presented as a failure envelope, with the effect of cyclic
loading accentuated. The contribution of the soil–chain interaction on the caisson capacity was minimal. No trenching was apparent on the
soil surface, and no gap was formed around the anchor in the considered centrifuge testing conditions. DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)GT.1943-
5606.0002818. © 2022 American Society of Civil Engineers.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)
History
Volume
148Issue
7Start Page
04022047-1End Page
04022047-17Number of Pages
17eISSN
1943-5606ISSN
1090-0241Publisher
American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)Language
enPeer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
Acceptance Date
2022-02-23External Author Affiliations
University of Western AustraliaEra Eligible
- Yes
Journal
Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental EngineeringArticle Number
04022047Usage metrics
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