TECHNICAL PAPERS
Oct 1, 1996

Centrifuge Modeling of Geotextile-Reinforced Cohesive Soil Retaining Walls

Publication: Journal of Geotechnical Engineering
Volume 122, Issue 10

Abstract

Twenty-four reduced scale models of vertical and steeply sloping (1 H :6 V ) reinforced soil walls were built using kaolin as the backfill, reinforced with a nonwoven geotextile simulant, and loaded to failure under increasing self-weight in the geotechnical centrifuge. Models were constructed on either firm or rigid foundations, and different lengths of reinforcement were tested. No pullout failures were observed in any models. In vertical walls failure developed entirely within the reinforced zone when L /H≥ 0.75; in the steeply sloped walls this threshold occurred when L /H≥ 0.67. Models on firm foundations showed better performance than identical models built on rigid foundations. A stability analysis using the simplified, two-dimensional limit-equilibrium simplified Bishop method incorporating reinforcement was found to be a good predictor of the behavior of the models based on calculated factors of safety at failure. The development of tension cracks in the backfill as walls underwent prefailure deformations led to stress concentrations in the geosynthetics and should be avoided in practice.

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Go to Journal of Geotechnical Engineering
Journal of Geotechnical Engineering
Volume 122Issue 10October 1996
Pages: 840 - 848

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Published online: Oct 1, 1996
Published in print: Oct 1996

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Authors

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A. Porbaha
Fellow of Sci. and Technol. Agency, Port and Harb. Res. Inst., 3-1-1 Nagase, Yokosuka 239, Japan; formerly, Grad. Student, Dept. of Civ. Engrg., Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742.
D. J. Goodings, Member, ASCE
Assoc. Prof., Dept. of Civ. Engrg., Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD.

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