Title
Testing and Monitoring of Earth Structures
Author
Cardoso, Rafaela (Lisbon Technical University)
Ramon-Tarragona, Anna (Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya)
Lourenço, Sérgio (The University of Hong Kong)
Mendes, João (University of Northumbria)
Caruso, Marco (Politecnico di Milano)
Jommi, C. (TU Delft Geo-engineering; Politecnico di Milano) 
Contributor
Chastre, Carlos (editor)
Neves, José (editor)
Ribeiro, Diogo (editor)
Graça Neves, Maria (editor)
Faria, Paulina (editor)
Date
2023
Abstract
Monitoring structural behavior of earth structures during construction and in service is a common practice done for safety reasons, consolidation control and maintenance needs. Several are the techniques available for measuring displacements, water pressures and total stresses, not only in these geotechnical structures but also at their foundations. Materials testing has been used for calibrating models for structural design and behavior prediction, and these models can be validated with instrumentation data as well. Relatively recent investigation on the behavior of these materials considering their degree of saturation focuses on monitoring the evolution of water content or suction as function of soil-atmosphere interaction, necessary to predict cyclic and/or accumulated displacements, and has huge potential to predict the impact of climate changes on the performance of existing geotechnical structures. This new need justifies the investment on developing sensors able to be used for in situ monitoring of water in the soils, such as those presented here. Testing and monitoring becomes even more important nowadays when, for sustainability purposes, traditional construction materials are replaced by other geo-materials with unknown behavior and long-term performance (mainly accumulated displacements). Existing experimental protocols and monitoring equipment are used for such cases, however new techniques must be developed to deal with particular behaviors. Three case studies are presented and discussion is made on monitoring equipment used and how monitored data helped understanding the behaviors observed.
Subject
Accumulated displacements
Chemical properties
Climate changes
Mineralogy
Monitoring
Non-traditional geo-materials
Suction
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:9b1738f7-1501-437b-8aaf-8b38453caa94
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-05875-2_4
Publisher
Springer Science+Business Media
Embargo date
2023-07-01
ISBN
978-3-031-05874-5
Source
Springer Tracts in Civil Engineering
Series
Springer Tracts in Civil Engineering, 2366-259X
Bibliographical note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.
Part of collection
Institutional Repository
Document type
book chapter
Rights
© 2023 Rafaela Cardoso, Anna Ramon-Tarragona, Sérgio Lourenço, João Mendes, Marco Caruso, C. Jommi