Liquefaction Mitigation of Silty Sands Using Rammed Aggregate Piers Based on Blast-Induced Liquefaction Testing
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
5T. Sismologia, geofisica e geologia per l'ingegneria sismica
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Issue/vol(year)
9/147 (2021)
Publisher
American Society of Civil Engineers
Pages (printed)
04021085
Date Issued
2021
Abstract
To investigate the liquefaction mitigation capability of rammed aggregate piers (RAP) in silty sand, blast liquefaction testing was
performed at a soil profile treated with a full-scale RAP group relative to an untreated soil profile. The RAP group consisted of 16 piers in a 4 × 4
arrangement at 2 m center-to-center spacing extending to a depth of 9.5 m. Blasting around the untreated area induced liquefaction (ru ≈ 1.0)
from a 3 to 11 m depth, producing several large sand boils and causing a settlement of 10 cm. In contrast, the installation of the RAP group
reduced excess pore water pressure (ru ≈ 0.75), eliminated sand ejecta, and reduced the average settlement to between 2 and 5 cm when
subjected to the same blast charges. Although the liquefaction-induced settlement in the untreated area could be accurately estimated using
an integrated cone penetration test (CPT)-based settlement approach, settlement in theRAPtreated area was significantly overestimated with the
same approach, even after considering RAP treatment-induced densification. Analyses indicate that settlement after RAP treatment could be
successfully estimated from liquefaction-induced compression of the sand and RAP acting as a composite material. This test program identifies
a mechanism that explains how the settlement was reduced for the RAP group despite the elevated ru values in the silty sands that are often
difficult to improve with vibratory methods.
performed at a soil profile treated with a full-scale RAP group relative to an untreated soil profile. The RAP group consisted of 16 piers in a 4 × 4
arrangement at 2 m center-to-center spacing extending to a depth of 9.5 m. Blasting around the untreated area induced liquefaction (ru ≈ 1.0)
from a 3 to 11 m depth, producing several large sand boils and causing a settlement of 10 cm. In contrast, the installation of the RAP group
reduced excess pore water pressure (ru ≈ 0.75), eliminated sand ejecta, and reduced the average settlement to between 2 and 5 cm when
subjected to the same blast charges. Although the liquefaction-induced settlement in the untreated area could be accurately estimated using
an integrated cone penetration test (CPT)-based settlement approach, settlement in theRAPtreated area was significantly overestimated with the
same approach, even after considering RAP treatment-induced densification. Analyses indicate that settlement after RAP treatment could be
successfully estimated from liquefaction-induced compression of the sand and RAP acting as a composite material. This test program identifies
a mechanism that explains how the settlement was reduced for the RAP group despite the elevated ru values in the silty sands that are often
difficult to improve with vibratory methods.
Type
article
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