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Estimation of soil strength in fine-grained soils by instrumented free-fall sphere tests

J. MortonCentre for Offshore Foundation Systems, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Perth, AustraliaConleth O’LoughlinCentre for Offshore Foundation Systems, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Perth, AustraliaDavid WhiteCentre for Offshore Foundation Systems, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Perth, Australia
2016en
ABI

Annotatsiya

The dynamic response of a sphere in soft clay is considered through field tests in which a 0·25 m dia. steel sphere was allowed to free-fall in water and dynamically penetrate the underlying soft soil. The test data, collected in a lake and a sea environment, relate to sphere velocities of up to 8 m/s, reaching sphere invert embedments close to ten diameters. An inertial measurement unit located within the sphere measured the motion response of the sphere during free-fall and penetration in soil. The resulting acceleration data were used within a simple framework that accounts for both geotechnical shearing resistance and fluid mechanics drag resistance, but cast in terms of a single capacity factor that can be expressed in terms of the non-Newtonian Reynolds number. The merit of the framework is demonstrated by using it as a forward model in a series of inverse analyses that calculate the undrained shear strength profile from acceleration data measured in free-fall sphere tests. The good match between these profiles and those obtained from ‘push-in’ piezoball penetrometer tests points to the potential for an instrumented free-fall sphere to be used as a tool for characterising the near-surface strength of soft seabeds.

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