Pile driving and submarine slope stability

a hybrid engineering approach

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Pascale Lamens (Student TU Delft, Royal Boskalis Westminster)

Amin Askarinejad (TU Delft - Geo-engineering)

Geo-engineering
Copyright
© 2020 P. Lamens, A. Askarinejad
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10346-020-01585-2
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 P. Lamens, A. Askarinejad
Geo-engineering
Issue number
4
Volume number
18 (2021)
Pages (from-to)
1351-1367
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

During pile installation into a submerged, sandy slope, liquefaction mechanisms including flow and cyclic liquefaction warrant attention. Because of the interconnection of these mechanisms, evaluating slope stability during and as a result of vibration-inducing construction activity is not trivial. This paper presents a practical approach to such an evaluation. The primary focus of any slope stability analysis must lie with flow liquefaction as the form of failure with the most hazardous potential. Given the importance of excess pore water pressure in giving rise to (delayed) slope failures due to cyclic loading events, excess pore pressure (EPP) generation and dissipation is the mechanism of most interest in modelling cyclic liquefaction. Currently, no engineering method exists which is able to capture the interconnected processes. Therefore, a hybrid model, consisting of a numerical tool which computes EPP generation and dissipation in time, is combined with empirical relations to describe the decay of EPPs generated due to pile driving in space and time. The proposed numerical tool predicts the evolution of EPP in a one-dimensional soil column close to a vibratory-driven pile, taking into account sustained static shear stresses, interim drainage, and pre-shearing. Radial EPP dissipation is considered the dominant mode of drainage. This engineering tool fits within a holistic slope stability analysis procedure, which is demonstrated for a submerged slope in the IJmuiden harbour of the Netherlands, where mooring piles and sheet piles are installed through a relatively loose layer of sand.