Undrained analysis A, B (and C)

Hi all, 

I have some questions in these types. 


01. Only consolidation analysis is possible after the undrained analysis in A and if it is B then manual said Su is needed to update. Please explain this statement. 


02. Based on undrained A, it over estimates the Cu of the soil in MC but not in advanced model like HS method A (as it matches like real soil behaviour) , can you explain how ?


03. MC model is not correct model and lets say if I'm going to use MC model, which type is more suitable as every types has pros and cons for example A=> correct PWP calculation but over-estimates the Cu , B=> PWP calculation is not correct, C => total stress analysis only. 


04. How PWP calculation in undrained B is not correct? and why C is not available in HS?


 One literature paper indicated like this for MC, A and B

Thanks. 

Parents
  • Hi Nitha,

    01) Undrained shear strength is specific to a certain effective stress state. So if the effective stresses  change, the undrained shear strength changes. A consolidation analysis increases the effective stresses and therefore also increases the undrained shear strength. When using Undrained B with consolidation that means that the user must update the undrained shear strength to match the new stress state due to consolidation.

    02) It has to do with the fact that Mohr-Coulomb considers the soil to be elastic and other models like HS to be elastoplastic. A full explanation would fall outside the scope of this forum...

    03) Mohr-Coulomb doesn't give correct PWP in neither Undrained A nor Undrained B, so your initial assumption is not correct. So in principle M-C can be used for Undrained B and Undrained C for just undrained stability analysis - no consolidation, and not for deformations as deformations are unreliable and sometimes completely wrong.

    04) Undrained B can only be used with the elastic Mohr-Coulomb model, and the assumption that soil is elastic is what gives wrong PWP. So it's not so much that Undrained B gives wrong pore pressures, but the Mohr-Coulomb model that gives wrong pore pressures.

    The HS model is an elastoplastic model and the elastoplasticity as used in the HS model depends on effective stresses. Therefore the HS cannot be used with Undrained C as Undrained C only calculates total stresses. If you want to calculate with elastoplasticity and Undrained C we recommend using the NGI-ADP model.

    With kind regards,

    Dennis Waterman

    Answer Verified By: Nitharshan 

  • Hi Dennis,

    Can I just clarify on your response to Q2?

    MC model is not an elastic model, is it as it has strength parameters and to me it's elasto-plastic, just like Hardening Soil but without the additional stress dependency, is it not?

    If that's correct, then how undrained A produce realistic result for HS?

    Thanks in advance. 

    Regards,

    Kelvin

  • Hi Kelvin,

    Mohr-Coulomb is an elastic-perfectly plastic model, which means it's am elastic model with a failure criterion. As long as the soil doesn't fail, the soil behaviour is elastic, whereas in the Hardening Soil model the soil already behaves elasto-plastic when the stress state is not at failure.

    So Mohr-Coulomb is nothing like the Hardening Soil model and Mohr-Coulomb is just not a realistic representation of soil behaviour. According to Mohr-Coulomb if you compress soil and then release it again the soil bounces back into it's original shape as if it was rubber without any permanent deformation. That is just not how soil behaves...

    With kind regards,

    Dennis Waterman

  • Thanks for the prompt response. Yes, agree with what you said. 

    But just wanted to confirm one thing. Using HS model with Undrained A will not (or unlikely) to result in the problem of overestimation of shear strength like MC + Undrained A?

    Is that understanding correct?

    Thanks,

    Kelvin

  • Dear Keviin,

    No, that is not correct. M-C will for sure overestimate the undrained strength for a normally consolidated soil. The Hardening Soil model may be able to predict the correct undrained shear strength, but depending on the stiffness parameters may still overestimate it or even underestimate it. And that is not unlikely, it happens.

    So if you chooise certain stiffness parameters you should check with for instance SoilTest what the resulting undrained shear strength is for the appropriate stress path (since undrained shear strength is not a single value, but different for different stress paths) and you may even want to double-check after your calculation if for instance the resulting (sig1 - sig3)/2 in your model doesn't exceed the undrained shear strength you got from a field or lab test.

    With kind regards,

    Dennis Waterman

Reply
  • Dear Keviin,

    No, that is not correct. M-C will for sure overestimate the undrained strength for a normally consolidated soil. The Hardening Soil model may be able to predict the correct undrained shear strength, but depending on the stiffness parameters may still overestimate it or even underestimate it. And that is not unlikely, it happens.

    So if you chooise certain stiffness parameters you should check with for instance SoilTest what the resulting undrained shear strength is for the appropriate stress path (since undrained shear strength is not a single value, but different for different stress paths) and you may even want to double-check after your calculation if for instance the resulting (sig1 - sig3)/2 in your model doesn't exceed the undrained shear strength you got from a field or lab test.

    With kind regards,

    Dennis Waterman

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