Numerical Investigation into Lateral Behavior of Monopile Due to Scour Enhanced: Role of State-Dependent Dilatancy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The State-Dependent Constitutive Model for Saturated Sand
2.1. Elastic Behavior
2.2. Yield Function
2.3. State-Dependent Dilatancy
- At a loose state (), the sand exhibits a contractive behavior (), as is always lower than when [22];
- At a dense state (), the sand displays either zero dilatancies when (upon phase transformation), or a dilative behavior () if otherwise [22];
- At the critical state, the dilatancy vanishes () being irrespective of the initial state by and ;
- The equation can be recovered to the dilatancy function of the original Cam clay model (i.e.,), by setting the two material constants as and .
2.4. State-Dependent Plastic Modulus
- For the initial state of sand in each horizon, at which is successive with the behavior of sand showing induced by a tiny but nonzero [24];
- For the initial state of sand in each horizon, at the critical state ( and ), because of the term ;
- For loose sand, by always smaller than , during the entire process of shearing. and the sand is in a strain-hardening state.
- For relatively dense sand, the formulation allows a smooth transition from to , in which the sand changes from strain-hardening state to strain-softening state, when and , respectively.
2.5. Constitutive Equation for Saturated Sand
3. Three-Dimensional Finite Element Model Analyses
3.1. Three-Dimensional Finite Element Model
3.2. Parameter Calibration and Model Validation
3.3. Numerical Modeling Procedure
- Establishing the model in no scour condition (as shown in Figure 3a), then identifying the scour depth of each case;
- Defining a special step for the formation of the scour pit. According to the depth of scour in this step, the scour soil is divided into many layers by 0.5 D of each horizon Then, the scour soil is slowly removed by means of adding the keywords in the ABAQUS input file, i.e., Model change, remove as shown in Figure 3b. This operation models the slow unloading process during scouring, and considers the influence of the stress relief;
- Applying the displacement on the pile head. Making sure that the deflection of the pile-soil interaction is developed uninterruptedly;
- Changing the depth of the scour pit base, and the same displacement is applied to the structure.
4. Numerical Results
4.1. The Variation of Pile Response Subjected to Scour
4.2. Lateral Load-Displacement Behavior from Simulation Results
4.3. The Analysis of the Remaining Sand Horizon
- The shallow sand horizon is softened and is subjected to scour obviously when the lateral sand resistance is lower than that at the same depth under original soil.
- The deeper depth is 10–20% hardener than that at the same horizon before.
4.4. Quantization of Dilation Angle
5. p-y Curves of the Constrained Horizon in Local Scour Condition
6. Conclusions
- After the erosion depth increases gradually, which differs from the past lateral service capacity variation of remaining interface soil, the lateral soil resistance in the shallow horizon failed. The relative density increases by dilatancy and process the stress relief brings about the strength failure. The depth of the weakened area is about 0.6 times scour depth.
- Unlike the general scour condition, the dilatancy of the shallow horizon and the restriction of remaining overburden soil surrounding the pile enhance the normal stress of the interface sand. Therefore, the lateral soil resistance in the deep horizon is ameliorated.
- Having considered the effect of dilatancy on friction angle and the change in normal stress and relative density during the displacement of the pile, the p-y curves considering the state variation can evaluate the lateral resistance in the deep horizon in local scour conditions.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Meaning of Parameters | Parameter | This Test | |
---|---|---|---|
Elastic parameters | Elastic modulus | 50 | |
Poisson’s ratio | 0.1 | ||
Critical state parameters | Stress ratio at the critical state | 1.25 | |
Intercept of CSL in or plane | 0.934 | ||
Slope of CSL in or plane | 0.019 | ||
0.7 | |||
Dilatancy parameters | Parameters of dilatancy function | 1 | |
3.5 | |||
Hardening parameters | Parameters of the hardening law | 3.15 | |
3.05 | |||
1.1 |
Meaning of Parameters | Parameter | This Test | |
---|---|---|---|
Basic parameters | Mean particle size (mm) | 0.4 | |
Specific gravity | 2.65 | ||
Maximum void ratio | 0.934 | ||
Minimum void ratio | 0.6 |
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Jia, N.; Liu, J.; Wang, X. Numerical Investigation into Lateral Behavior of Monopile Due to Scour Enhanced: Role of State-Dependent Dilatancy. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 921. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12020921
Jia N, Liu J, Wang X. Numerical Investigation into Lateral Behavior of Monopile Due to Scour Enhanced: Role of State-Dependent Dilatancy. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(2):921. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12020921
Chicago/Turabian StyleJia, Ning, Junwei Liu, and Xuetao Wang. 2022. "Numerical Investigation into Lateral Behavior of Monopile Due to Scour Enhanced: Role of State-Dependent Dilatancy" Applied Sciences 12, no. 2: 921. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12020921
APA StyleJia, N., Liu, J., & Wang, X. (2022). Numerical Investigation into Lateral Behavior of Monopile Due to Scour Enhanced: Role of State-Dependent Dilatancy. Applied Sciences, 12(2), 921. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12020921