Long integral bridges experience an enhanced cyclic soil structure interaction with their granular backfills, especially due to seasonal thermal loading. For numerical modelling of this interaction behaviour under cyclic loading, it is important to employ a suitable constitutive model and calibrate it thoroughly. However, up to the present, experimental data and calibrated soil models for this purpose with focus on typical well-graded coarse-grained bridge backfill materials are rarely available in the literature. Therefore, one aim of this paper is to present results of a comprehensive cyclic laboratory testing programme on highly compacted gravel backfill material. Based on this, a hypoplastic constitutive model with intergranular strain extension for small strain and cyclic behaviour is calibrated and evaluated against the experimental test data. The soil model's abilities and limitations are discussed at element test level. In addition, cyclic FE analyses of an integral bridge are conducted with several hypoplastic parameter sets from the literature and compared to the calibrated gravel backfill material. The investigation highlights that poorly-graded sands show significantly smaller cyclic earth pressures compared to well-graded gravels intended for the backfilling of a bridge. The soil structure interaction behaviour is clearly governed by the general soil model stiffness, including the small strain stiffness.
Testing of small-scale physical models of masonry structures can be useful both to study Soil Structure Interaction problems and to provide large enough datasets to statistically validate the global level assumptions of masonry numerical models. This paper proposes the use of a sand -based Binder Jet 3D printer to manufacture 1:10 scaled physical models of masonry walls, that can be used within a centrifuge. As such printers can only print one material, mortar is emulated by controlling the micro -geometry of the printed material at the position of the joints (i.e., by printing joints). Walls were printed and tested in compression and cyclic shear under fixed -fixed conditions and constant compressive load. Different notch geometries were tried. The tested specimens were found to behave similarly in compression and shear to full scale masonry walls. A numerical model using a concrete damage plasticity model was built in Abaqus. It captured the cyclic response of the masonry walls with a reasonable accuracy. Therefore, such small-scale models can be used to expand centrifuge modeling in structural engineering.