Liquefaction Performance of Shallow Foundations in Presence of a Soil Crust

  • George Bouckovalas
  • Panos Dakoulas
Part of the Geotechnical, Geological and Earthquake Engineering book series (GGEE, volume 6)

Abstract

Liquefiable soils are currently categorized by all seismic codes as extreme ground conditions where, following a positive identification of this hazard, the construction of surface foundations is essentially allowed only after proper treatment soil. This article examines to what extent this situation may change in presence of a non-liquefiable soil crust, between the foundation and the liquefiable soil. Means are provided for analytical evaluation of the degraded bearing capacity and the associated seismic settlements for the specific case of strip foundations on a cohesive (clay) crust. Furthermore, the conditions are explored which ensure a viable performancebased design, and the issue of a critical soil crust thickness, beyond which liquefaction effects are minimal, is addressed.

Keywords

Bearing Capacity Soil Crust Excess Pore Pressure Undrained Shear Strength Shallow Foundation 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

Preview

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Copyright information

© Springer 2007

Authors and Affiliations

  • George Bouckovalas
    • 1
  • Panos Dakoulas
    • 2
  1. 1.Geotechnical EngineeringNational Technical University of AthensGreece
  2. 2.Department of Civil EngineeringUniversity of ThessalyGreece

Personalised recommendations