Geosciences (Nov 2020)
Application of Spatial Supporting Construction as an Effective Method for Stabilising a Landslide
Abstract
Buttresses constitute a spatial supporting construction (SSC) that can convey large loads coming from the pressure of unstable soil on deeper, more stable layers to make it safer with respect to the load-bearing capacity. They make the counteraction against the pressure, which initiates sliding when the forces to move the landslide body, not balanced by the internal frictional forces in the soil. Some specific features of known construction elements were used in the buttress, such as sheet pile walls and drilled piles. Although beneficial in this case, the specific shape of the axis of the wall made from piles and sheets formed a wave created from circle sections (in plan view). Thus, a stable steel buttress was formed. The interaction of the buttress with the soil mass pressure over it, which stabilises the landslide mass, was considered. To further strengthen the buttress, a reinforced concrete slab was added on the upper edge of the thin walls of sheets and piles, thereby integrating and stiffening the whole structure. The application of the concrete slab enabled the use of the stabilisation role of additional forces (become from its weight and above laysoil)to stabilise the buttress. The results of this study achieved a substantial stabilising effect, increasing maximal forces reacting against the pressure of the unstable soil block. Assumptions madeand the applied calculations confirm thestability of the buttress (by increasing the stability of the whole slump block of landslide) are described. Two cases are presented to illustrate the stabilisation and control of movement in which the block body moves along inadvance of the determined slip surface.
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