4.5 Article

Three-Dimensional Stability of Slopes under Water Drawdown Conditions

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEOMECHANICS
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)GM.1943-5622.0002614

Keywords

Three-dimensional (3D) slope; Stability analysis; Water drawdown; Limit analysis

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Slopes near reservoirs are at risk of collapse during water level fluctuations, causing significant financial losses. Traditional 3D upper-bound analysis methods do not provide rigorous estimations of slope stability due to their approximation of pore water pressure distribution. This study proposes a numerical approach to accurately determine the hydraulic head distribution of a slope under drawdown conditions, and incorporates it into a 3D rotational failure mechanism for upper-bound estimations of slope safety factors. Validation is conducted through a case study on a slope at the Three Gorges Reservoir, and different drawdown conditions are analyzed to assess their impacts on slope stability.
In practical engineering, slopes near reservoirs are susceptible to collapse during the rising and falling of water levels, resulting in huge financial losses. Three-dimensional (3D) upper-bound analysis is an effective vehicle to assess slope stability under water drawdown. However, in previously published 3D upper-bound analysis, the pore water pressure distribution caused by drawdown is often approximately determined by employing a pore-pressure coefficient, which is not theoretically sound and fails to give rigorous upper-bound estimations of slope stability. To overcome this shortcoming, the hydraulic head distribution of a slope subjected to drawdown was determined numerically using seepage flow calculations. The obtained hydraulic head distribution was subsequently incorporated into the 3D rotational failure mechanism of the kinematic approach of limit analysis, so as to deliver an upper-bound solution to slope safety factors. To validate the proposed approach, a case study on the Chenjiawan slope at the Three Gorges Reservoir, China, and comparisons with numerical calculations and previous studies are performed. Four different drawdown conditions are considered in this study and corresponding stability charts are provided for directly assessing the safety factors of slopes subjected to different drawdown conditions. The effects of different drawdown processes on the slope's stability are studied, showing the unfavorable effect of the external drawdown process and the beneficial effect of the internal drawdown process.

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