Seismic soil-pile interaction is evaluated in this study based on back-calculated p-y loops constructed from sampled data of pile bending moments. Fundamental properties of p-y loops are implemented to derive distributed springs and dashpots, thereby quantifying soil-pile interaction in the realm of a Beam on Dynamic Winkler Foundation modeling. The procedure is validated by means of well-documented centrifuge tests of a single pile supported structure founded on a two-layer soil profile that comprises of soft clay overlying dense sand. Two shaking levels of a real earthquake motion applied at the base of the soil profile were examined and the generated seismic p-y loops were compared to cyclic p-y curves commonly used in pile design practice. The results demonstrate the strong influence of intensity of the input motion on seismic p-y loops while cyclic p-y curves established for soft clays tend to overestimate soil stiffness under strong excitation. Typical sets of recorded and computed structural response are presented, denoting the ability of the BDWF model related to p-y loops in reproducing adequately fundamental aspects of seismic soil-pile interaction.
In the present article the effect of subsoil interventions on the response of soil-structure systems under strong earthquake shaking is studied. Several idealized configurations of commonly applied as well as innovative intervention techniques are examined, referring to increased or reduced stiffness of the initial subsoil conditions of the subsoil-foundation-structure system. Numerical analysis utilizing validated simulation procedures covers a large spectrum of structures and soil conditions. A parametric investigation of several key factors is also conducted. A comparative evaluation of the results in time and frequency domain is aiming in generalizing the conclusions to several earthquake and soil-structure combinations. Obtained results reveal a rather detrimental effect of the stiffness-increasing methods, whereas techniques related to modification of oscillation dynamic properties with flexible subsoil intervention schemes, present promising alternatives for an efficient mitigation of structural response to strong earthquakes.
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