Technical Papers
Dec 19, 2018

Practice of Searching a Noncircular Critical Slip Surface in a Slope with Soil Variability

Publication: International Journal of Geomechanics
Volume 19, Issue 3

Abstract

An improved approach is proposed here for searching the global noncircular critical slip surface in a slope with soil variability. To avoid the local minimum, the proposed approach combines a readily available optimization with the simulated annealing algorithm (SAA). The simplified Morgenstern-Price method was used to calculate the factor of safety (Fs) for the generated slip surface. The reliability of the searching strategy was evaluated through the effect of vertices number and the position of the initial slip surface. Subsequently, the proposed method was used to analyze two example problems involving slope profiles with different geometries and strength fields. The results showed that the location of the initial slip surface had a negligible influence on the global critical slip surface as well as the corresponding factor of safety, if the annealing time was sufficient. The location of the global critical slip surface diverged when the segment number was greater than 3. The proposed approach can seek the relative global factor of safety with a calculation accuracy of 1 × 10−4, which is suitable for engineering use. The noncircular slip surface assumption was superior to the circular slip surface assumption for both the simple multilayered soil slope and the spatially variable soil slope with a low level of strength variation. However, the circular slip surface assumption will also locate more critical slip surfaces if the variation of soil strength reaches a high level. The critical Fs value was determined from the given random strength field other than the assumption of a circular or noncircular slip surface. The noncircular slip surface searching strategy can provide a useful supplement for the limited-equilibrium method (LEM) searching for the critical slip surface in a spatially variable soil slope. Practitioners can select the smaller Fs from these two different assumptions.

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Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 51508427), as well as the Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province (Grant 2014CFB772). We express our gratitude to the editors and the reviewers for their constructive and helpful review comments.

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Go to International Journal of Geomechanics
International Journal of Geomechanics
Volume 19Issue 3March 2019

History

Received: Oct 20, 2017
Accepted: Aug 20, 2018
Published online: Dec 19, 2018
Published in print: Mar 1, 2019
Discussion open until: May 19, 2019

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Associate Professor, School of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Wuhan Institute of Technology, Wuhan, Hubei 430073, People’s Republic of China. Email: [email protected]
Professor, School of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Wuhan Institute of Technology, Wuhan, Hubei 430073, People’s Republic of China (corresponding author). Email: [email protected]
Fan Gu, A.M.ASCE [email protected]
Postdoctoral Researcher, National Center for Asphalt Technology, Auburn Univ., 277 Technology Parkway, Auburn, AL 36830. Email: [email protected]

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