4.5 Article

Reliability assessment of slopes with three-dimensional rotated transverse anisotropy in soil properties

Journal

CANADIAN GEOTECHNICAL JOURNAL
Volume 58, Issue 9, Pages 1365-1378

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cgj-2019-0611

Keywords

rotated transverse anisotropy; 3D probabilistic slope stability analyses; soil spatial variability; reliability index; slide length

Funding

  1. Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region [15220415]

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This study investigates the impact of rotated transverse anisotropy in soil properties on 3D probabilistic slope stability analysis, finding that the orientation of soil layers in relation to the slope direction significantly affects slope reliability indices.
The influence of soil variability on three-dimensional (3D) probabilistic slope stability analysis has been investigated previously for soils that display isotropic spatial variability features or anisotropic horizontal fabric patterns. However, due to various soil deposition processes, weathering, filling or tectonic movements, the assumptions of isotropy or horizontal layering may not always be realistic. This study presents 3D analyses of slopes with spatially variable soils associated with rotated transverse anisotropy features. The results show that for cross-dip slopes where the strike direction of soil strata is perpendicular to the out-of-plane direction of the slope, the reliability depends on various factors including strata rotation angle and autocorrelation distances, and differs significantly from slopes with horizontally deposited soil fabric. The influence of strata orientation is also pronounced for dip slopes and reverse dip slopes, and these are presented in terms of reliability indices of the slopes and statistics of the length of sliding mass and elaborated by considering the failure mechanism under different scenarios. Through these analyses, this paper discusses the key features of slope reliability considering rotated transverse anisotropy in soil properties, and their major differences from situations involving horizontal soil layers or two-dimensional probabilistic assessments.

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