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A comparative analysis of the stability of homogeneous and non-
homogeneous soil slopes subject to various surcharge loading
conditions

Leeworthy, T; Ahangar Asr, A

A comparative analysis of the stability of homogeneous and non-
homogeneous soil slopes subject to various surcharge loading
conditions Thumbnail


Authors

T Leeworthy



Abstract

Slope stability is a topic of great importance within the scope of civil engineering, this study investigates the differences between homogeneous and non-homogenous soil slopes when various surcharge loading conditions are applied. To analyze slope stability the finite element method is used, this method uses the shear strength reduction method. This method gradually reduces the cohesion and friction angle of the soil until failure occurs in the model. Typically, the limit equilibrium method is used by civil engineers, which splits the model into slices to identify the failure mechanisms and the factor of safety. However, as the software improves, and the accuracy of analysis increases, finite element analysis will become the more commonly used method [1, 2].
In this study 6 different models are used in the analysis, three homogenous soil slopes and three nonhomogeneous soil slopes to aid in the analysis, the soil properties were obtained from [3]. Each model was subject to surcharge loading, which was incrementally increased until failure occurred, recording the factor of safety at each point. The results gathered suggest that point loads caused failure in models to occur much quicker than surcharge loading from a uniformly distributed load, however, the failure area is much smaller.
The comparison of homogenous and non-homogenous soil slopes shows that stability is dependent on three key properties including cohesion, unit weight, and friction angle, with the properties of the soil
slope influencing the maximum surcharge loading that can be applied to a model. The results indicate that homogenous soils can withstand higher surcharge loading conditions compared to that of nonhomogeneous soil slopes, except for homogenous models consisting of silty sand.

Citation

conditions. Presented at UK Association for Computational Mechanics (UKACM) Conference 2021, Loughborough University, UK

Presentation Conference Type Other
Conference Name UK Association for Computational Mechanics (UKACM) Conference 2021
Conference Location Loughborough University, UK
End Date Apr 16, 2021
Publication Date May 11, 2021
Deposit Date Jul 9, 2021
Publicly Available Date Jul 9, 2021
DOI https://doi.org/10.17028/rd.lboro.14595666
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.17028/rd.lboro.14595666
Related Public URLs https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/projects/UK_Association_for_Computational_Mechanics_UKACM_Conference_2021/113478
Additional Information Event Type : Conference

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