Geomechanics and Engineering A

Volume 31, Number 1, 2022, pages 71-86

DOI: 10.12989/gae.2022.31.1.071

Investigation of slope reinforcement with drilled shafts in colluvium soils

An-Jui Li, Wei-Chien Wang and Horn-Da Lin

Abstract

In Taiwan, an efficient approach for enhancing the stability of colluvium slopes is the drilled shaft method. For slopes with drilled shafts, the soil arching effect is one of the primary factors influencing slope stability and intertwines to the failure mechanism of the pile-soil system. In this study, the contribution of soil arching effect to slope stability is evaluated using the FEM software (Plaxis 3D) with the built-in strength reduction technique. The result indicates the depth of the failure surface is influenced by the S/D ratio (the distance to the diameter of piles), which can reflect the contribution of the soil arching effect to soil stability. When a (rock inclination angles)=B (slope angles) is considered and the S/D ratio=4, the failure surface of the slope is not significantly influenced by the piles. Overall, the soil arching effect is more significant on a=b, especially for the steep slopes. Additionally, the soil arching effect has been included in the proposed stability charts. The proposed charts were validated through two case studies, including that of the well-known Woo-Wan-Chai field in Taiwan. The differences in safety factor (FoS) values between the referenced literature and this study was approximately 4.9%.

Key Words

colluvium; drilled shaft; failure mechanism; soil arching effect; stability charts

Address

An-Jui Li, Wei-Chien Wang and Horn-Da Lin: Department of Civil and Construction Engineering, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, No.43, Keelung Rd., Sec.4, Da'an Dist., Taipei City, Taiwan R.O.C.