skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: An SPH framework for drained and undrained loading over large deformations
Abstract We propose a new approach for performing drained and undrained loading of elastoplastic geomaterials over large deformations using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH), a meshfree continuum particle method, combined with the modified Cam Clay (MCC) model of critical state soil mechanics. The numerical approach draws upon a novel one‐particle two‐phase penalty‐method based formulation for handling undrained loading in saturated soils, which allows tracking of the buildup of pore‐water pressures under combined shearing and compression. Large‐scale parallelized simulations are employed to accommodate a significant number of degrees of freedom in a three‐dimensional setting. After verification and benchmark testing, the SPH based formulation is used to analyze the propagation of reverse faults through fluid‐saturated clay deposits and the rupture of strike‐slip faults across earthen embankments. The computational methodology tests the robustness of the meshfree approach in situations where the soil tends to dilate on the ‘dry’ side of the critical state line and to compact on the ‘wet’ side, but cannot, because of the incompressibility constraint imposed by undrained loading. Our results extend the current understanding of fault rupture modeling and further demonstrate the potential of our framework together with the SPH method for large deformation analyses of complex problems in geotechnics.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1914780
PAR ID:
10514791
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  ;  ;  
Publisher / Repository:
Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
Date Published:
Journal Name:
International Journal for Numerical and Analytical Methods in Geomechanics
ISSN:
0363-9061
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Permanent deformation and uplift caused by fault rupture is one of the most significant hazards posed by earthquakes on the built environment. In this paper, we use Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) to explore the effects of soil layering or stratification on the trajectories and deformation patterns caused by rupturing reverse faults in bedrock, as well as in the foundations of engineered earth structures. SPH is a continuum meshfree numerical method highly adept at modeling large deformation problems in geotechnics. Through the use of constitutive models involving softening behavior as well as critical state type models, we isolate the effects of rigid body rotation from critical state behavior of soil in helping explain the frequently observed rotation of shear bands emanating from the bedrock fault. This analysis is facilitated by the fact that the SPH method allows us to track the propagation of shear bands over substantial amounts of vertical uplift (more than 50\% of the total height of the soil deposit), far beyond many previous computational studies employing the finite element method (FEM). We observe and characterize various emergent features including fault bifurcations, stunted faults, and tension cracking, while providing insights on practical guidelines regarding the potential surface distortion width, and the critical amount of fault displacement required for surface rupture depending on the multilayered constitution of the soil deposit. Finally, we predict the expected amount of surface distortion and internal damage to earthen embankments depending on varying fault location and soil makeup. 
    more » « less
  2. Calibrations of the PM4Silt constitutive model are presented for two low-plasticity fine-grained soils that exhibit significantly different cyclic loading be-haviors. The PM4Silt model is a stress-ratio controlled, critical state compatible, bounding surface plasticity model that was recently developed for representing low-plasticity silts and clays in geotechnical earthquake engineering applications. The low-plasticity clayey silt and silty clay examined herein were reconstituted mixtures of silica silt and kaolin with plasticity indices (PIs) of 6 and 20. Un-drained monotonic and undrained cyclic direct simple shear (DSS) tests were per-formed on normally consolidated, slurry deposited specimens. Calibration of the PM4Silt model was based on the monotonic and cyclic DSS test data, plus em-pirical relationships for strain-dependent secant shear moduli and equivalent damping ratios. The calibration process and performance of the PM4Silt constitu-tive model are described for each soil. The results illustrate that PM4Silt is capa-ble of reasonably approximating a range of monotonic and cyclic loading behav-iors important to many earthquake engineering applications and is relatively easy to calibrate. 
    more » « less
  3. The failure of sheared granular materials is manifested in zones of intensive shearing known as shear bands. The onset and evolution of shear bands are influenced by many factors including specimen density, particle morphology, gradation, boundary conditions, and loading conditions. This paper investigated how particle morphology and drainage condition (drained versus undrained) affect the evolution of shear bands for saturated sand. 
    more » « less
  4. Calibration and validation of constitutive models and numerical modeling techniques used in analysis of soil liquefaction and its effects are often based on extensive comparisons with the results of element tests and centrifuge experiments. While good quality experimental data are available to understand and quantify the stress-strain-strength response of liquefiable soils in monotonic and cyclic drained/undrained element (triaxial and direct simple shear) tests, the results of these experiments are often less repeatable when the soil approaches liquefaction state and relatively large deviatoric strains suddenly develop within a few cycles of loading. The main source of these less repeatable patterns of soil behavior appears to be instability rather than the attainment of a state of material failure. The goal of this paper is to investigate the role of instability on the stress-strain response of liquefiable soils by using a critical state sand plasticity model that is enriched with an internal length scale representing the potential shear bands that may develop during monotonic or cyclic loading conditions. Through a series of numerical simulations, it is shown that the global stress-strain response measured in the element tests is a good approximation of the soil constitutive response before an unstable condition such as shear banding or liquefaction develops in the soil specimen. 
    more » « less
  5. Biocementation is a biomediated ground improvement method that can improve the engineering behavior of granular soils through the precipitation of calcium carbonate minerals. Although cemented bonds and particle coatings generated from biocementation can enable large increases in soil initial shear stiffness, peak shear strength, and liquefaction resistance; emerging strategies such as soil desaturation have shown the ability of alternative mechanisms to enable large improvements in liquefaction behaviors. This article highlights outcomes from recent experiments which have investigated the potential of novel treatment processes to enable the generation and entrapment of gases within biocementation. We hypothesize that these entrapped gases may provide a secondary mechanism to improve soil undrained shearing behaviors by enabling the release of gases following cemented bond deterioration and related increases in pore fluid compressibility. Our study employs a series of batch experiments to identify new methods to both generate and entrap gasses within an organic polymer layer applied intermittently between biocementation treatments. Biocemented composites resulting from this work may enable large improvements in the environmental and financial efficacy of biocementation and the resilience of treated soils to extreme loading events. 
    more » « less