Influence of Heterogeneous Arrangements of Reinforcements’ Length and Stiffness on the Deformation of Instrumented Geosynthetic-Reinforced Retaining Walls Constructed with Sustainable Locally Available Backfill Soils
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Program
2.1. Field Geosynthetic-Reinforced Soil Wall
2.2. Soil Properties and Compaction Process
2.3. Geosynthetics
2.4. Measurement of Internal Displacement
2.5. Methodology for Strains and Tensile Load Calculation
3. Results
3.1. Distribution of Displacements along Reinforcements
3.2. Lateral Displacements of Walls Facing
3.3. Reinforcement Strains
3.4. Potential Failure Surface Location
3.5. Mobilized Loads along the Wall Height
4. Conclusions
- The uniform distribution of reinforcement stiffness led to a more uniform distribution of displacements along the reinforcement length at different elevations and along the wall height than nonuniform structures.
- The levels of reinforcement stiffness adopted in this research were relatively high for the levels of loads mobilized by reinforcements, which leads to a more significant effect of reinforcement length than stiffness. However, some effects of the heterogeneity of reinforcement stiffness could be captured in this investigation.
- The shape of the distribution of displacements along the wall height is more affected by the reinforcement length than by the stiffness. The reduced anchorage length was found to lead to greater displacements toward the face, while longer reinforcements uniformly distributed the displacements along the length.
- In walls that used different types of reinforcement over the wall height, in which stiffer reinforcement layers were used at lower reinforced layers of the structure, displacements levels were smaller than in the case of uniform arrangements. This is attributed to the attraction of loads to stiffer reinforcement layers.
- The use of stiffer reinforcements at lower reinforced layers was found to reduce the facing displacements at upper portions of the wall. This is only for walls with a uniformity of reinforcement lengths with a length-to-height greater than 1.0. Reducing the length-to-height ratio to 0.8 resulted in increases in facing displacements in the first third of the wall height.
- The wall with a length-to-height ratio of 0.5 at lower portions but keeping this ratio greater than 1.0 at upper portions of the wall had significant increases in facing displacements, more substantially than in regions in which the length was reduced.
- The use of excessive anchorage length did not bring significant benefits to wall performance. Conversely, the use of very short reinforcements at lower reinforced layers can overcharge upper longer reinforcements in addition to increasing the facing displacements locally. The use of smooth interfaces (e.g., woven geotextile–soil) also contributes to the relief of loads overloading other reinforcement layers.
- Walls that used the length-to-height ratio greater than 0.7 had enough interfacial strength between the soil and geosynthetics leading to a global or local stiffness dependency on the wall behavior. However, some additional but smaller displacements were measured when reducing the length even when the L/H was greater than 0.7.
- Comparing the increase in strains with time observed in the instrumented walls to those obtained through laboratory conventional in-isolation creep tests, considering the same mobilized loads, the results show that using conventional creep tests for predicting load and deformation is a consistent tool for the design analyses of relatively low height structures for the reinforcements and configurations used in this research.
- The polypropylene geotextile had greater long-term deformation due to its susceptibility of creep. However, the use of the polyester geogrid at lower portions led to reduced long-term deformations.
- The load’s distribution along the wall height were nonlinear and closer to the face than those of linear Rankine’s failure surface, which could demand shorter reinforcement lengths. Using nonuniform reinforcement stiffness but uniform reinforcement lengths along the wall height and an Lr/H greater than 0.7 led to a bilinear distribution of loads along the wall height. In walls with a length-to-height lower than 0.8 a change in the load’s distribution was demonstrated.
- Using nonuniform grouped reinforcement layers resulted in local disagreement between the experimental and calculated mobilized loads using the AASTHO and K-stiffness method. In general, the K-stiffness method was more consistent and less conservative than the AASTHO method. As the nonuniformity attracts more loads to lower and stiffer reinforcement layers, this phenomenon is not computed in either design method. A similar conclusion can be derived for nonuniform structures in terms of reinforcement lengths.
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Notations
a | parameter of sigmoidal curves fitting (dimensionless) |
b | parameter of sigmoidal curves fitting (dimensionless) |
c | parameter of sigmoidal curves fitting (dimensionless) |
c’ | Cohesion Intercept (kPa) |
d | extensometer displacement (mm) |
E120 | Internal horizontal displacements rows at 1.2 m |
E240 | Internal horizontal displacements rows at 2.4 m |
E80 | Internal horizontal displacements rows at 0.8 m |
GG40 | PET geogrid with tensile load of 40 kN/m |
GG50 | PET geogrid with tensile load of 50 kN/m |
GRRW | Geosynthetic-reinforced retaining wall |
GT50 | PP woven geotextile with tensile strength of 50 kN/m |
H | wall height (m) |
J | Secant reinforcement stiffness (kN/m) |
Lr | reinforcement length (m) |
Lrglobal | average of reinforcement lengths along the wall heights (m) |
PET | Polyester |
PP | Polypropylene |
Sglobal | global wall reinforcement stiffness (kN/m) |
Slocal | reinforcement stiffness (kN/m) |
sv | vertical spacing between reinforcements (m) |
t | Time (hour) |
Tmax | maximum mobilized reinforcement loads (kN/m) |
w | Optimum moisture content (dimensionless) |
x | distance from the face to the measured point (mm) |
ε | strain (dimensionless) |
σ1 | Major principal stress (kPa) |
σ3 | Minor principal stress (kPa) |
σv | Vertical stress (kPa) |
φ’ | Friction angle (°) |
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Property | Unit | Value |
---|---|---|
Sand content | % | 47 |
Silt content | % | 7 |
Clay content | % | 46 |
Maximum dry unit weight Dry unit weight | kN/m3 | 16.2 |
Optimum moisture content (at standard Proctor compaction test), w | % | 21.2 |
Liquid limit | % | 50 |
Plastic index | % | 16 |
Cohesion Intercept (CD Triaxial test), c | kPa | 10 |
Friction angle (CD Triaxial test), φ | Degree | 30 |
Properties | Standard | GG40 | GG50 | GT50 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Polymer type | - | Polyester (PET) | Polyester (PET) | Polypropylene (PP) |
Ultimate tensile strength (kN/m) | ASTM D6637-11 [29] | 47.3 | 54.9 | 43.2 |
Deformation at failure (%) | ASTM D6637-11 | 15.2 | 16.6 | 36.9 |
Secant stiffness@2% (kN/m) | - | 593 | 785 | 200 |
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Portelinha, F.H.M.; Goulart, J.M.H.; Avesani Neto, J.O. Influence of Heterogeneous Arrangements of Reinforcements’ Length and Stiffness on the Deformation of Instrumented Geosynthetic-Reinforced Retaining Walls Constructed with Sustainable Locally Available Backfill Soils. Sustainability 2023, 15, 8183. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108183
Portelinha FHM, Goulart JMH, Avesani Neto JO. Influence of Heterogeneous Arrangements of Reinforcements’ Length and Stiffness on the Deformation of Instrumented Geosynthetic-Reinforced Retaining Walls Constructed with Sustainable Locally Available Backfill Soils. Sustainability. 2023; 15(10):8183. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108183
Chicago/Turabian StylePortelinha, Fernando H. M., Joao M. H. Goulart, and Jose Orlando Avesani Neto. 2023. "Influence of Heterogeneous Arrangements of Reinforcements’ Length and Stiffness on the Deformation of Instrumented Geosynthetic-Reinforced Retaining Walls Constructed with Sustainable Locally Available Backfill Soils" Sustainability 15, no. 10: 8183. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108183
APA StylePortelinha, F. H. M., Goulart, J. M. H., & Avesani Neto, J. O. (2023). Influence of Heterogeneous Arrangements of Reinforcements’ Length and Stiffness on the Deformation of Instrumented Geosynthetic-Reinforced Retaining Walls Constructed with Sustainable Locally Available Backfill Soils. Sustainability, 15(10), 8183. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108183