Investigating the effect of soil models on deformations caused by braced excavations through an inverse-analysis technique |
| |
Authors: | Yu-Geng Tang Gordon Tung-Chin Kung |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Architecture, Hwa-Hsia Institute of Technology, Taipei 23568, Taiwan;2. Sustainable Environment Research Center, National Cheng Kung University, Tainan 70955, Taiwan |
| |
Abstract: | In this study, a series of inverse-analysis numerical experiments was performed to investigate the effect of soil models on the deformations caused by excavation by using the finite element method. The nonlinear optimization technique that was incorporated into the finite element code was used for the inverse-analysis numerical experiments. Three soil models (the hyperbolic model, pseudo-plasticity model, and modified pseudo-plasticity model) were employed in the intended numerical experiments on a well-documented excavation case history. The results indicate that wall deflection due to excavation can be accurately back-figured by each of the three soil models, while the ground surface settlement can be reasonably optimized only by the pseudo-plasticity model and the modified pseudo-plasticity model. Importantly, the modified pseudo-plasticity model can yield more reasonable simulations when the wall deflection and the ground surface settlement are simultaneously back-figured. The results show that selection of an adequate soil model that is capable of adequately describing the stress–strain-strength characteristics of the soils is essentially crucial when predicting the excavation-induced ground response. |
| |
Keywords: | Inverse analysis Finite element method Optimization Excavation Soil model Small strain |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|