CPT-based probabilistic liquefaction assessment considering soil spatial variability, interpolation uncertainty and model uncertainty

Journal Article (2022)
Authors

Z. ZHENG (City University of Hong Kong)

Yu Wang (City University of Hong Kong)

Affiliation
External organisation
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compgeo.2021.104504
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Volume number
141
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compgeo.2021.104504

Abstract

In engineering practice, simplified procedure based on cone penetration test (CPT) results is widely used for evaluating soil liquefaction potential. Since the CPT-based simplified procedure was developed from observations during past earthquakes, it is semi-empirical and involves significant uncertainty (e.g., model uncertainty). In addition, due to time, budget and access constraints, CPTs are often sparsely conducted at a specific site, leading to a significant uncertainty associated with interpolation of the limited CPT soundings, particularly along horizontal direction. Furthermore, it is well-recognized that spatial variability of soil properties has a remarkable effect on soil liquefaction. All these variability and uncertainties greatly affect the seismic liquefaction assessment results, particularly spatial distribution of liquefiable soils in a site, and liquefaction-induced damage. This underscores a question of how to properly incorporate these variability and uncertainties in liquefaction assessment, e.g., how to characterize spatial distribution of soil liquefaction potential in a site with quantitative consideration of the abovementioned variability and uncertainty. To address this issue, this paper develops a novel probabilistic method for characterizing spatial distribution of soil liquefaction potential through factor of safety, FS against liquefaction in a vertical cross-section using Bayesian compressive sampling and Monte Carlo simulation. Using the proposed method, many random field samples of FS cross-section are obtained directly from limited CPT measurements. The proposed method is illustrated using both a simulated data example and a set of real CPT data from Christchurch, New Zealand. It is shown that the proposed method performs well and provides reasonable liquefaction assessment results.

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