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U.S.-Taiwan Workshop on Soil Liquefaction. Direct Evaluation of Effectiveness of Prefabricated Vertical Drains in Liquefiable Sand. Wen-Jong Chang, National Chi Nan University Ellen M. Rathje, University of Texas at Austin Kenneth H. Stokoe, II , University of Texas at Austin
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U.S.-Taiwan Workshop on Soil Liquefaction Direct Evaluation of Effectiveness of Prefabricated Vertical Drains in Liquefiable Sand Wen-Jong Chang, National Chi Nan University Ellen M. Rathje, University of Texas at Austin Kenneth H. Stokoe, II , University of Texas at Austin Brady R. Cox, University of Texas at Austin 11/03/2003~11/04/2003 @ NCTU
Outline • Introduction • Drainage Techniques • Experiment Methodology • Test Results • Conclusion
Introduction • Liquefaction-induced damages: Key role: pore pressure generation
Mitigation Methods • Reducing the excess pore pressure generation • Densification: dynamic compaction etc. • Reinforcement: compaction grouting etc. • Quickly remove the accumulated pore water pressure • Drainage: gravel drains, stone columns, prefabricated vertical drains Combination of both effects
Research Significances • Problems of conventional gravel drains • mixing, clogging, installation disturbance • Advantages of prefabricated drains • minimum mixing, better discharge and storage capacity, developed sites applicable • Goals: Quantitatively evaluate the effectiveness of drainage alone
Drainage Techniques : Analytical Background • Seed and Booker: develop chart-based approach • Onoue et al. : consider drain resistance, chart-based approach • Pestana et al. : includes drain resistance and reservoir capacity, FEM code (FEQDrain)
Drainage Techniques : Experimental Works • Onoue et al. : large-scale in situ experiments • Iai et al. : shaking table test • Yang and Ko : centrifuge test on a trench shape drain • Brennan and Madabhushi : centrifuge test on a “cell”
Field Performance of Gravel Drains • Japan’s experiences: sand drains performed well in 1993 Kushiro-Oki and 1995 Hyogoken-Nambu EQ. • Sand drains reduced ground settlements more than 50% • Performance cannot be solely attributed to drainage
Prefabricated Drains • Components: • Features: better discharge capacity & storage capacities • Installation: statically/dynamically • Rollins et al. blasting test: reducing 40~80% settlements Open slot Filter fabric Plastic pipe
Experiment Methodology • Two full-scale reconstituted specimens • In situ dynamic liquefaction test • Data reduction • Test setup
In Situ Dynamic Liquefaction Test • Components: • Dynamic source : Vibroseis truck • Embedded instrumentation: Liquefaction test sensor & DAQ • Test layout
Vibroseis Truck Hydraulic Ram
Test Layout Vibroseis truck Waterproof liner PVC pipe Backfill soil Footing 2 1 0.3 m 3.3 m 1.2 m 5 Liquefaction sensor 0.3 m Accelerometer 4 3 Settlement platform 0.3 m 0.3 m 1.2 m
Data Analysis • Pore pressure data: separate static, hydrodynamic, and residual excess pore pressure via digital filter • Shear strain calculation: • Displacement-Based (DB) method • Apparent Wave (AW) method • Pore pressure generation curve & time histories
Test Setup Drain pipe Drain Test No Drain Test
Specimen Preparation • Both specimens using water pluviation to construct loose, saturated specimens • Prefabricated drain were installed prior water pluviation no densification • Sensors were installed during water pluviation process
Testing Procedure • Loading frequency=20 Hz for 3 seconds • Interactive stage loading: • From small loading to largest loading level • Fully dissipation of excess pore pressure between loading • Determine threshold shear strain • Generate pore pressure generation curve
Threshold shear strain Test Results:Pore Pressure Generation Curve
Time Histories No Drain Test Drain Test
Dissipation Behavior Ru-time histories at different radial distances
Conclusions • Drainage alone can considerably • reduce pore pressure generation • minimize settlement • accelerate after shaking dissipation • With single prefabricated drain, max. pore pressure ratio only 35% instead of 100% in No Drain Test
Conclusions (cont.) • Drainage alone can reduce volumetric strain up to 75% • Prefabricated drain can be an effective alternative for liquefaction mitigation • Same testing procedure can be implemented to evaluate other remediation techniques and current treated sites
Thank You Research Supported by National Science Foundation