Borui Ge, Gary Martin, Matthew S Dietz, G. Mylonakis, Andrea Diambra
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This paper describes a novel laboratory test apparatus for investigating the axial interaction between pipeline and soil. Contrary to the majority of existing pipe-soil shear rigs, the proposed apparatus applies a relative pipe-soil shear displacement through driving a soil box below an axially restrained pipe segment, which is instrumented to measure the pipe settlement and the axial resistance at the pipe-soil contact surface. Through axial shear tests of polypropylene pipe segment on sand, this paper explores the effect of vertical loads, soil types and densities on the resulting axial resistance and estimates the interface stress evolution. The coefficients of axial resistance obtained from large-scale pipe-soil shear tests are compared to those obtained via planar element interface shear tests with consideration of the wedging effect. Their consistency suggests that, under the low stress levels investigated in this work, the effect of both pipeline curvature and settlement on the resultant data is minor. The agreement provides validation for the novel apparatus to generate high-quality data under controlled conditions for future studies. The findings of this study will also potentially help reduce the uncertainties around subsea pipeline design when linking the interface shear behaviour at element scale to large-scale pipe-soil interaction.
期刊介绍:
The Canadian Geotechnical Journal features articles, notes, reviews, and discussions related to new developments in geotechnical and geoenvironmental engineering, and applied sciences. The topics of papers written by researchers and engineers/scientists active in industry include soil and rock mechanics, material properties and fundamental behaviour, site characterization, foundations, excavations, tunnels, dams and embankments, slopes, landslides, geological and rock engineering, ground improvement, hydrogeology and contaminant hydrogeology, geochemistry, waste management, geosynthetics, offshore engineering, ice, frozen ground and northern engineering, risk and reliability applications, and physical and numerical modelling.
Contributions that have practical relevance are preferred, including case records. Purely theoretical contributions are not generally published unless they are on a topic of special interest (like unsaturated soil mechanics or cold regions geotechnics) or they have direct practical value.