SFARS - Seismic failure and post-failure response of slopes
Abstract:
Earthquakes have long been recognised as a major cause of landslides involving development of massive soil movement and large
post-failure deformations both in natural slopes and earth structures, such as dams or embankments. For example, the 2016
Kumamoto earthquake in Japan triggered 3460 landslides within an area of about 6000 km2 (Xu et al., 2018); the 2016 Kaikoura
earthquake in New Zealand generated more than 10000 landslides, the largest one exceeding a volume of 20 million m3 (Massey et
al., 2018). Extensive lateral spreads were also observed in Italy during the 2012 Emilia earthquake (Fioravante et al., 2013).
Recently, dams that underwent large deformations are the Niwaikumine and Makio dams (Tani, 2000), three dams in India during
the 2001 Bhuj earthquake (Singh et al., 2005) and several dams in China during the 2009 Wenchuan earthquake. Therefore, there is
great impetus to deepen the understanding of the deformation processes and failure mechanisms of the slopes subjected to
earthquakes and develop suitable numerical tools to assess the consequences associated with the occurrence of these phenomena
in the failure and post-failure stages of the landslides.
A considerable amount of work has been conducted to analyse seismic slope stability. Unfortunately, a limited number of detailed
experimental studies focused on the seismic and post-seismic behaviour of slopes are available in the technical literature. Most of
the existing studies are theoretical or deal with the back-analysis of earthquake-induced landslides. They move from simplified
methods to fully coupled continuum analyses using the finite difference (FDM) or the finite element method (FEM). In some studies,
these methods were also used to analyse landslide triggering due to soil liquefaction (Boulanger, 2019). To date, however, it is still
an open challenge to model the entire process of a landslide, including failure initiation, run-out and deposition. Indeed, a strong
limitation of the above-mentioned numerical techniques is their inability to maintain numerical accuracy due to mesh-distortion
effects when the slopes undergo large deformations. Thus, these methods are unsuitable to model the post-failure stage of
landslides, especially when a flow-type failure occurs due to soil liquefaction. The material point method (MPM) is an innovative
numerical method that overcomes this limitation (Sulsky et al., 1994), allowing for the solution of engineering problems involving
large deformations. To date, MPM has been also used to investigate the slope response to earthquakes (Bhandari et al., 2016; Tjung
and Soga, 2021). These studies have demonstrated the potential of MPM in modelling the seismic and post-seismic response of
slopes.
In the current state of practice, simplified methods are often used. Considering that a flow-type failure represents a condition
whereby static shear stresses in a slope of saturated cohesionless soils exceed the strength of the liquefied soil (i.e., the so-called
undrained steady-state or residual strength), a static limit equilibrium analysis is usually performed using the residual strength of the
involved soil. This soil strength is usually evaluated using empirical relationships derived from the back-analysis of case histories
(Idriss and Boulanger, 2008; Kramer and Wang, 2015). Simplified methods are also available for a rough estimate of the lateral
spread displacements (Youd et al., 2002; Faris et al., 2006). For clayey soils susceptible to cyclic softening, a reduced value of the
undrained strength is instead used in the slope stability analyses, as suggested by Boulanger and Idriss (2007). When a flow-type
failure is not expected to occur (static shear stresses not exceeding the residual strength), pseudo-static methods are generally
applied in which the inertial forces acting on the potentially unstable soil mass are evaluated using a seismic coefficient that is
usually provided by the current regulations. When the resulting safety factor drops below unity, the Newmark sliding block model is
often used to predict the slope displacements. According to this model, sliding would occur when the input acceleration exceeds a
critical value and cease when the relative velocity becomes zero. On the other hand, practical methods capable of predicting the
consequences of the deformation processes (from triggering to the run-out of the landslide) occurring in slopes subjected to
earthquakes are still missing in the technical literature.
The present proposal is framed in the above-described context.
Dettagli progetto:
Responsabile scientifico: Fioravante Vincenzo
Fonte di finanziamento: Bando PRIN 2022
Data di avvio: 28/09/2023
Data di fine: 27/09/2025
Contributo MUR: 50.745 €
Co-finanziamento di UniFe: 17.909 €
Partner:
- Università della CALABRIA (capofila)
- Università degli Studi di FERRARA