scholarly journals Instrumentation Around a Warm Oil Pipeline Buried in Permafrost

1973 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. Slusarchuk ◽  
G. H. Watson ◽  
T. L. Speer

A section of an uninsulated pipeline, 90 ft (27.4 m) long and 2 ft (0.61 m) in diameter, was buried in ice-rich permafrost at the Mackenzie Valley Pipe Line Research Limited Inuvik Test Facility. Oil at 160 °F (71 °C) was circulated through the pipe from July 1971 to January 1972 causing a thaw bulb to develop around it.Instrumentation was placed around the pipe to measure temperature, settlement, and pore-water pressure. Temperatures near the ground surface and at depth were measured using thermistors as the sensing element. Settlement was monitored by spiral foot gauges and by taking elevations at the ground surface and on rods welded to the pipe. Pore pressures were measured by gas-operated and Casagrande-type piezometers. Selection, fabrication, and installation of this instrumentation are discussed.

1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 464-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.D. Eigenbrod

Slow, shallow ground movements in a slope near Yellowknife caused excessive tilting of timber piles that supported an engineering structure. To avoid damage to the structure, the pile foundations had to be replaced by rigid concrete piers that were designed to resist the forces of the moving soil mass. Downhill movements were rather slow and, during an initial inspection, were indicated only by soil that was pushed up against a series of piles on their uphill sides, while gaps had formed on their downhill sides. No open cracks or bulging was observed on the slope. A stability analysis indicated that the slope was not in a state of limit equilibrium. To obtain a better understanding of the creep movements in the slope and their effect on the rigid concrete piers, extensive instrumentation was carried out after the construction of the piers. This included slope indicators, piezometers, thermistors, and total-pressure cells against one of the concrete piers. In addition, a triaxial testing program was undertaken in which the effect of cyclic pore-water pressure changes on the long-term deformations of the shallow clay layer was investigated. From the data collected in the field and laboratory, it could be concluded that (i) tilting of the original timber piles was caused by downslope movements related to cyclic pore-water increases; (ii) the lateral soil movements increased almost linearly with depth from 2 m below the ground surface, with no indication of a slip surface; and (iii) the pressures exerted by the moving soil mass against the rigid concrete piers within the soil mass were equal to the passive resistance activated within the moving soil mass. Key words : soil creep, slope movements, soil pressures, pore-water pressures, freezing pressures, permafrost, cyclic loading.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duaa Al-Jeznawi ◽  
ISMACAHYADI Mohamed Jais ◽  
Bushra S. Albusoda

Abstract Liquefaction of saturated soil layers is one of the most common causes of structural failure during earthquakes. Liquefaction occurs as a result of increasing pore water pressure, whereby the rise in water pressure occurs due to unexpected change in stress state under short-term loading, i.e., shaking during an earthquake. Thus, general failure occurs when the soil softens and eliminates its stiffness against the uplift pressure from the stability of the subsurface structure. In this case, the condition of soil strata is considered undrained because there is not enough time for the excess pore water pressure to dissipate when a sudden load is applied. To represent the non-linear characteristics of saturated sand under seismic motions in Kobe and Ali Algharbi earthquakes, the computational model was simulated using the UBCSAND model. The current study was carried out by adopting three-dimensional-based finite element models that were evaluated by shaking table tests of a single pile model erected in the saturated soil layers. The experimental data were utilized to estimate the liquefaction and seismicity of soil deposits. According to the results obtained from the physical models and simulations, this proposed model accurately simulates the liquefaction phenomenon and soil-pile response. However, there are some differences between the experiment and the computational analyses. Nonetheless, the results showed good agreement with the general trend in terms of deformation, acceleration, and liquefaction ratio. Moreover, the displacement of liquefied soil around the pile was captured by the directions of vectors generated by numerical analysis, which resembled a worldwide circular flow pattern. The results revealed that during the dynamic excitation, increased pore water pressure and subsequent liquefaction caused a significant reduction in pile frictional resistance. Despite this, positive frictional resistance was noticed through the loose sand layer (near the ground surface) until the soil softened completely. It is worth mentioning that the pile exhibited excessive settlement which may attribute to the considerable reduction, in the end, bearing forces which in turn mobilizing extra end resistance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 143 ◽  
pp. 01015
Author(s):  
Wenjie Song ◽  
Yanyong Xiang

An analytical continuous upper bound limit analysis is developed to analyse the effects of seepage on the transverse stability of underwater shield tunnels. The approach is based on an analytical continuous upper bound limit analysis method for cohesive-frictional soils. It employs the complex variables solution of the displacement field due to tunnel deformation and movement, and the analytical solution of the pore water pressure field for steady state seepage due to pore water influx at the tunnel perimeter. The most critical slip line position and the minimum required tunnel support pressure are determined by using a particle swarm optimization scheme for various generic situations. The method is verified via finite element simulation and comparison with the solution from using rigid block upper bound limit analysis. The parametric analysis revealed among other things that both the infimum of the necessary tunnel support pressure and the most critical plastic zone increase when the hydraulic head at the ground surface increases, but decrease when the tunnel influx increases due to the fact that pore water pressure at the tunnel perimeter decreases with the tunnel influx.


1973 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas L. Holzer ◽  
Kaare Höeg ◽  
Kandiah Arulanandan

The objective of this presentation is to examine experimentally how the excess pore-water pressure is related to the mechanism for undrained creep of San Francisco Bay mud. The results are discussed in the context of creep mechanisms previously suggested in the literature and based on laboratory testing.It is found that shear strains occurring during undrained creep are directly related to a gradual but significant increase in excess pore pressure and, hence, reduction in effective stresses. The increase in magnitude of the pore pressure is, except immediately after the creep shear stress is applied, solely a function of the initial consolidation stress and consolidation period. The magnitude of the long-term build-up may be related to the amount of secondary compression which would occur during drained conditions. It increases with the organic content of the soil and decreases with the degree of remolding. The mechanism for the increase in pore-water pressure may be explained by drainage of water from micropores in the microstructure into the macrostructure.Unless one accounts for the increase in pore pressures during undrained creep, it is unlikely that one will be successful in formulating a generally valid mathematical model for stress–strain–strength–time behavior based on laboratory testing.


2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 288-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhi-Feng Wang ◽  
Shui-Long Shen ◽  
Chu-Eu Ho ◽  
Yong-Hyun Kim

This paper presents a case study of an investigation into the responses of the surrounding ground to the horizontal twin-jet grouting method (HTJGM) in soft soil deposits of Shanghai. During the field test, the variation of pore-water pressure, lateral earth pressure, lateral displacements of the subsurface soils, and ground surface heave induced by the installation of five horizontal jet-grouted columns were monitored. The monitoring results indicate that the excess pore-water pressure reached 4 to 6 times the undrained shear strength of the soils, while maximum lateral displacements and ground surface heave were up to 80 and 17 mm, respectively. The influence range due to the installation of jet-grouted columns was between 15 and 20 times the nominal column radius. The development of prediction methods for lateral displacements and ground surface heave induced by the HTJGM installation process are presented and discussed. Results from the investigation suggest that the proposed prediction methods can be used to provide reasonable estimates of ground response and influence range of horizontal jet grouting.


Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Yan Wang ◽  
Yongjun Zhang ◽  
Mingfei Li ◽  
Yi Qi ◽  
Tianhui Ma

Considering the unique conditions of deep and large subway foundation pit excavation affected by heavy rainfall in soil-rock composite strata, this paper employs finite element numerical simulation methods to study foundation pit instability under the influence of heavy rainfall. According to the hydraulic coupling conditions caused by rainfall, a fluid-solid coupling numerical model for a deep and large subway foundation pit in soil-rock composite strata is established in this paper. By selecting the Anshan road station of Qingdao subway line 4 as the engineering background, various parameters related to foundation pit excavation affected by heavy rainfall at different excavation depths were analyzed. The study found that after the foundation pit was excavated, the surrounding pore water pressure decreased and the pore water pressure near the ground surface increased rapidly due to rainfall. As the horizontal distance from the foundation pit increased, the pore water pressure at the same depth also increased. The excavation of the foundation pit caused uplift of the bottom of the pit. After rainfall, the uplift value decreased compared with that before rainfall. With increasing excavation depth, the decreased value of the bottom uplift decreased and then increased. The rainfall caused the horizontal displacement of the pit walls on both sides of the pit to increase. When the excavation depth was 10 m, the horizontal displacements on both sides of the pit were equivalent. When the excavation depth was 20 m, the horizontal displacement was concentrated in the first 10 m; when the excavation depths were 30 m and 40 m, the horizontal displacement was concentrated in the first 13 m. This finding shows that when the foundation pit was affected by rainfall, the sidewall collapsed at a distance of 13 meters from the ground. As the excavation depth increased, the depth of excavation instability was closer to the bottom of the pit. The research in this paper can provide a reference for the construction of deep and large foundation pits in similar composite ground conditions that are affected by rainfall.


2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 1049-1062 ◽  
Author(s):  
C WW Ng ◽  
B Wang ◽  
Y K Tung

Three-dimensional (3D) numerical analyses were conducted to investigate groundwater responses in an initially unsaturated cut slope at Lai Ping Road in Hong Kong subjected to rainfalls with various patterns, durations, and return periods. Initial and boundary conditions were established from field monitoring data. The computed results show that rainfall pattern has a significant influence on pore-water pressures in soil layers near the ground surface but its influence gradually diminishes with depth. Rainfall with an advanced storm pattern of 24 h duration was found to be the most critical because it results in the highest pore-water pressure in the slope. At a given depth, the influence of rainfall pattern on pore-water pressures depends on the initial groundwater conditions: the higher the initial water table, the smaller the influence of rainfall pattern on pore-water pressures. Under a given rainfall duration, the rise of pore-water pressure at the study site is significant only when the return period increases from 10 years to 100 years, but not from 100 years to 1000 years. Short-duration, intense rainfall causes larger variations in pore-water pressure at shallow depths, whereas long-duration rainfall has a greater influence on groundwater in deep soils because of the generally greater amount of rainfall. For prolonged rainfalls, the difference in pore-water pressure distribution resulting from different rainfall patterns is less significant than that from short-duration, intense rainfalls.Key words: Lai Ping Road, rainfall patterns, pore-water pressure distributions, suction, unsaturated slope.


1994 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 403-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
George(Bebe)T. Zorapapel ◽  
Mladen Vucetic

The effects of the gradual buildup of seismic pore water pressures and associated degradation of stiffness on the ground surface motion are examined for shallow saturated liquefiable deposits. Ground surface displacements and accelerations, the Fourier Transforms of the acceleration-time histories and layer gain factors are analyzed. The analysis is based on the ground surface and sub-surface accelerations and pore water pressures recorded at sites that either fully liquefied or built up considerable pore water pressures during strong earthquakes. The analysis shows that: (i) the seismic pore water pressures within the deposit and the ground surface motion are intimately related, (ii) relatively small seismic excess pore water pressures can cause a considerable lengthening of the predominant period of the ground surface motion, and (iii) these phenomena may lead to a limited maximum ground surface acceleration of approximately 0.2g, and a considerable increase of maximum ground displacements.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 2355-2390
Author(s):  
G. W. Waswa ◽  
S. A. Lorentz

Abstract. Previous studies indicate that most rainfall-triggered shallow landslides are initiated by a spike in rainfall intensity, which does not usually occur at the beginning of a critical storm, within which the slide is triggered, but after several minutes (or hours) of the storm. The critical storm is also usually not positioned at the beginning of a rainfall season, but after several days of antecedent period. Rainfall triggers landslides via rapid increase in pore water pressure, commonly associated with the change in water content. Consequently, many hydrologic pressure wave models assume that rapid pore water pressure responses are as a result of rapid infiltration of rainwater. On the contrary, this paper argues that, based on the above timings of landslide occurrences and the knowledge that infiltration rate decays with the soil wetness, the rapid increase in pore water pressure that triggers shallow landslides is as a result of rapid introduction of additional energy into the tension saturated (or nearly saturated) zone by the intense rainfall at the ground surface, without infiltration. Antecedent and critical precipitations are significant in creating a tension saturated zone, necessary for rapid transmission of the introduced energy from the ground surface to the lower soil horizons during the critical storm. These arguments are supported by a newly proposed one-dimensional diffusion mathematical model, which, when solved for the appropriate boundary conditions, can yield pore water pressure at any time and depth of a tension-saturated soil profile, without infiltration. The newly proposed diffusion model is mathematically similar to Iverson's model (Iverson, 2000), except that the hydraulic diffusivity parameter in the latter is substituted with a newly proposed energy diffusivity coefficient in the former. A combination of the new diffusion model and the infinite slope model can predict the stability of a shallow slope as a result of transient pore water pressure.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Anthi ◽  
NIKOS GEROLYMOS

Abstract A numerical algorithm for executing non-linear ground response analysis of layered sites is developed, capable of reproducing liquefaction phenomena, considering the simultaneous dissipation of the excess pore water pressure through soil grains. Τhe wave propagation algorithm is based on the plasticity constitutive model for sand Ta-Ger expressed in a one dimensional p-q space form, which exhibits remarkable versatility in representing complex patterns of sand cyclic behavior, such as stiffness decay and decrease in strength due to build-up of pore-water pressure. Its calibration is based on shear modulus reduction and damping curves for drained loading conditions and liquefaction resistance curves for undrained conditions. A detailed presentation of the numerical model formulation is provided, indicating the numerical approach of the wave propagation and consolidation differential equations. The recorded seismic ground response of the Port Island array from Kobe 1995 earthquake is used as a benchmark for testing the validity of model predictions. The model is finally applied to estimate the elastic response spectra at the surface of soil profiles with liquefiable layers (ground type S2) as per EC8:2004. The investigation study involves the ground response analysis of diverse soil profiles, all including a liquefiable zone, excited with a suite of earthquake motions at their base. The acceleration time histories were extracted from the PEER Ground Motion Database having characteristics compatible with the NGA-estimated response spectrum at the bedrock and with key seismological parameters such as the earthquake magnitude Mw and horizontal distance from the fault RJB. Two different methods are applied regarding the selection of base excitations: Amplitude scaled records (to match a target response spectrum) and spectral matched records. From the results an idealized response spectrum is deduced in terms of the design spectrum parameters S, η, ΤΒ and TC. It is shown that the idealized ground surface response spectrum is marginally sensitive to method of base excitation selection.


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