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To investigate the mechanical characteristics of frozen silty clay under complex stress paths, using the true triaxial instrument for permafrost, tests were carried out under triaxial compressive and plane strain stress states using the true triaxial instrument for permafrost to analyze deformation characteristics and strength evolution law under different stress paths and minor principal stresses (sigma(3)) and establish strength criterion under plane strain conditions. PFC3D numerical simulation results were compared to test results and meso-crack evolution law was discussed. The results showed that stress-strain curves were characterized by strain hardening. Destructive strength showed a gradual increase with the increase of sigma(3) and the values obtained from plane strain tests were higher than those of triaxial compression tests. Volume strains basically showed shear shrinkage characteristics and all sigma(3) directions were expansion deformation. Strength at damage under plane strain state was approximated based on generalized Mises and Lade-Duncan plane strain strength criterion using generalized plane strain strength criterion. Stress-strain curves obtained from numerical simulation tests in PFC3D basically agreed well with those obtained from indoor test results. The number of tensile and shear cracks in the developed numerical model under various stress paths were increased with generalized shear strain.

期刊论文 2025-04-26 DOI: 10.1080/19648189.2024.2431738 ISSN: 1964-8189

As a long lifeline system of buried structures, the utility tunnel (UT) is vulnerable to earthquake invasion. For utility tunnels with inverted siphon arrangements crossing rivers, the seismic response is more complex due to the basin effect of acceleration in the topography and the influence of fluctuating hydrodynamic pressure, but there is currently a gap in targeted seismic response analyses and references. Based on a UT project in Haikou, this paper studied seismic responses of a cast-in-place UT considering the coupled model of water-soil-tunnel structure on ABAQUS software. Herein, the dynamic fluctuation of hydrodynamic pressure is simulated using an acoustic-solid interaction model. A viscoelastic artificial boundary was used to simulate the soil boundary effect, and seismic loads were equivalent to nodal forces. Considering seismic invading direction and varying water elevation, this paper investigates the dynamic response characteristics and damage mechanisms of river-crossing utility tunnels. This study shows that the basin effect causes the soil acceleration around the UT to show variability in different sections, and the amplification factor of the peak acceleration at the central location is almost doubled. The damage and dynamic water pressure of the UT are intensified under bidirectional seismic excitation, and the damage location is concentrated at the junction of the horizontal and the vertical section. Bending moments and axial forces are the main mechanical behaviors along the axial direction. Changes in river levels have a certain positive effect on the UT peak MISES, DAMAGEC, and SDEG, and it exhibits a certain degree of energy dissipation and seismic damping effect. For the aseismic design of cross-river cast-in-place utility tunnels, bidirectional seismic calculations should be performed, and the influence of river hydrodynamic pressure should not be neglected.

期刊论文 2024-11-01 DOI: 10.3390/buildings14113434
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