Abstract
Staged construction uses controlled rates of load application to increase the foundation stability of structures founded on soft cohesive soils and to improve the slope stability of tailings dams. Because construction causes positive excess pore pressures and because actual failures usually occur without significant drainage, stability analyses should compute the factor of safety against an undrained failure as the most critical and realistic condition. This requires an undrained strength analysis (USA) that treats predicted or measured in situ effective stresses as equal to consolidation stresses in order to calculate variations in undrained shear strength during construction. The recommended USA methodology requires a detailed evaluation of changes in vertical stress history profiles, uses undrained strength ratios obtained from CK 0 U tests to account for anisotropy and progressive failure, and is more rational than stability evaluations based on UU and CIU triaxial compression testing. Conventional effective stress analyses should not be used for staged construction because the computed factor of safety inherently assumes a drained failure that can give highly misleading and unsafe estimates of potential instability. © ASCE.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Ladd, C. C. (1991). Stability evaluation during staged construction. Journal of Geotechnical Engineering, 117(4), 540–615. https://doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9410(1991)117:4(540)
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