Seepage, Deformation, and Stability Analysis of Sandy and Clay Slopes with Different Permeability Anisotropy Characteristics Affected by Reservoir Water Level Fluctuations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods and Theory
2.1. Theory of Unsaturated Seepage
2.2. Theory of Pore Pressure–Stress Coupling
2.3. Safety Factor for Unsaturated Soil
3. Numerical Model Framework
3.1. Numerical Model and Boundary Conditions
3.2. Unsaturated Soil Properties
3.3. Physical and Mechanics Parameters
3.4. Definition of Anisotropy and Calculation Conditions
4. Results
4.1. Effect of Permeability Anisotropy on Seepage Characteristics
4.1.1. Sandy Soil
4.1.2. Clay Soil
4.1.3. Analysis of Infiltration Line Hysteretic Elevation (ILHE)
4.2. Effect of Permeability Anisotropy on DeformationCcharacteristics
4.2.1. Sandy Soil
4.2.2. Clay Soil
4.2.3. Analysis of Maximum Horizontal Displacement (MHD)
4.3. Effect of Permeability Anisotropy on Safety Factors
4.3.1. Sandy Soil
4.3.2. Clay Soil
4.3.3. Analysis of Minimum Safety Factor (MSF)
5. Discussion
5.1. Effect of Reservoir Water Level Drawdown on Seepage Deformation and Stability of Slope
5.2. Effect of Permeability Anisotropy on Seepage Deformation and Stability of Slope
5.3. Advice for Future Studies
6. Conclusions
- The increase of kr and α decreases the infiltration capacity of slope soil, which increases the pore water pressure, as well as the x-displacement, and decreases the SF. The delay phenomenon occurs during the drawdown of the reservoir water level.
- The infiltration line hysteretic elevation (ILHE), the maximum horizontal displacement (MHD), and the minimum safety factor (MSF) are defined to characterize the delay phenomenon, the deformation, and the stability. The values of ILHE, MHD, and MSF increase with the increase of kr and α. The ILHE of the sandy slope is smaller than that of the clay slope, but the MHD and MSF of the sandy slope is larger than that of the clay slope.
- There are mainly three aspects of the impact of reservoir water drawdown on the slope, which include two unfavorable factors containing the delay phenomenon and the water pressure unload and one positive factor containing the increase of soil strength and effective stress. The x-displacement reaches a maximum in the slope toe, which indicates the slope toe firstly fails during the reservoir water drawdown, and it is consistent with the test results in the existing literature.
- The differences of ILHE, MHD, and MSF between only considering kr as well as both considering kr and α are statistically analyzed. For the sandy slope, the values of ILHE, MHD, and MSF are quite different under the conditions with only considering kr and with both considering kr and α, while they become relatively small for the clay slope. Therefore, we must consider kr and α for the sandy slope; however, for the clay slope, we can consider only kr to simplify computation.
- In this paper, the permeability anisotropy ratio kr and direction α are only considered in our simulation; future studies should combine the permeability anisotropy with the soil strength anisotropy in numerical analysis and develop new corresponding anisotropic material and carry out the model tests to verify the numerical simulation results.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Soil Type | SWCCs Parameters | Permeability Coefficient | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a (kPa) | m | n | θ (%) | kx (m/s) | kx (m/d) | |
Sand | 10 | 1 | 1 | 45 | 10−4 | 8.64 |
Clay | 100 | 1 | 1 | 45 | 10−6 | 0.0864 |
Soil Type | Unit Weight (kN·m−3) | Poisson’s Ratio | Elastic Modulus (GPa) | Cohesion (kPa) | Internal Friction Angle (°) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sand | 21.8 | 0.18 | 1.26 | 11.2 | 31.2 |
Clay | 16.3 | 0.35 | 0.02 | 15.6 | 28.8 |
Reservoir Water Drawdown Rate (m/s) | Soil Type | kx (m/s) | kr | α (°) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.2 | Sand | 10−4 | ||
Clay | 10−6 |
Analysis Content | Only Considering kr | Considering both kr and α | |
---|---|---|---|
ILHE | Sandy slope | 6.51% | 35.53% |
Clay slope | 4.7% | 9.94% | |
MHD (Slope toe) | Sandy slope | 6.9% | 45.0% |
Clay slope | 21.4% | 32.0% | |
MSF | Sandy slope | 2.72% | 11.58% |
Clay slope | 9.29% | 12.31% |
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Yu, S.; Ren, X.; Zhang, J.; Wang, H.; Wang, J.; Zhu, W. Seepage, Deformation, and Stability Analysis of Sandy and Clay Slopes with Different Permeability Anisotropy Characteristics Affected by Reservoir Water Level Fluctuations. Water 2020, 12, 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010201
Yu S, Ren X, Zhang J, Wang H, Wang J, Zhu W. Seepage, Deformation, and Stability Analysis of Sandy and Clay Slopes with Different Permeability Anisotropy Characteristics Affected by Reservoir Water Level Fluctuations. Water. 2020; 12(1):201. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010201
Chicago/Turabian StyleYu, Shuyang, Xuhua Ren, Jixun Zhang, Haijun Wang, Junlei Wang, and Wenwei Zhu. 2020. "Seepage, Deformation, and Stability Analysis of Sandy and Clay Slopes with Different Permeability Anisotropy Characteristics Affected by Reservoir Water Level Fluctuations" Water 12, no. 1: 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010201
APA StyleYu, S., Ren, X., Zhang, J., Wang, H., Wang, J., & Zhu, W. (2020). Seepage, Deformation, and Stability Analysis of Sandy and Clay Slopes with Different Permeability Anisotropy Characteristics Affected by Reservoir Water Level Fluctuations. Water, 12(1), 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010201