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Keywords = rock bridge pile

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17 pages, 4605 KB  
Article
Investigation into the Bearing Behavior of Bridge Pile Foundations in Complex Rock Strata: Considering the Effect of Pile Roughness
by Shuqing Pan, Xiaoxiong Lin, Qingye Shi and Bai Yang
Buildings 2026, 16(8), 1486; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16081486 - 9 Apr 2026
Viewed by 266
Abstract
A rock-socketed pile model load test was conducted for the renovation project of the dangerous old bridge at Shaoping Bridge. The experiment focused on the core parameter of the roughness factor (RF) of the pile body, revealing its influence on the bearing characteristics. [...] Read more.
A rock-socketed pile model load test was conducted for the renovation project of the dangerous old bridge at Shaoping Bridge. The experiment focused on the core parameter of the roughness factor (RF) of the pile body, revealing its influence on the bearing characteristics. The study delved into the load–displacement relationship, ultimate bearing capacity evolution, axial force transmission mechanism, average lateral resistance performance characteristics, and pile–soil relative displacement law of test piles in complex rock formations under different RF values. The research results indicated the following: The test pile exhibited typical brittle failure. At the moment of failure, the load at the pile head dropped abruptly, resulting in a steep drop in its load–displacement curve. Under ultimate load conditions, the average attenuation amplitudes of axial force in the four test piles decreased progressively in Rock Layer I, II, and III, measuring 26.96%, 14.86%, and 10.84%, respectively. The average side resistance distribution along the pile shaft showed a single-peak pattern, peaking in Rock Layer I. Increasing RF effectively enhanced the bearing capacity of test piles. However, a higher RF value does not necessarily yield better results, as it exhibits an inverted U-shaped relationship with bearing capacity. Under the specific conditions of this study, the highest bearing capacity among the tested RF values was observed at RF = 0.168; beyond this threshold, performance actually declined. The pile-top load was primarily shared by side resistance and end bearing resistance. Both components initially increased and then decreased with increasing RF, where the end bearing resistance accounted for 43.64~49.47% of the upper load. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Stability and Performance of Building Foundations)
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31 pages, 11054 KB  
Article
Study on P-Y Curve Parameters of Large-Diameter Rock-Socketed Pile Under Lateral Load
by Feng Xu, Guoliang Dai, Weiming Gong, Xueying Yang and Lei Xia
Buildings 2026, 16(7), 1352; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16071352 - 29 Mar 2026
Viewed by 382
Abstract
Response of large-diameter rock-socketed piles subjected to lateral loads is a critical issue in foundation design for bridges, high-rise buildings, and offshore platforms. Although the p-y curve method is commonly used for pile analysis in soil, its direct application to rock-socketed piles remains [...] Read more.
Response of large-diameter rock-socketed piles subjected to lateral loads is a critical issue in foundation design for bridges, high-rise buildings, and offshore platforms. Although the p-y curve method is commonly used for pile analysis in soil, its direct application to rock-socketed piles remains challenging due to the significant differences in mechanical properties between rock and soil. This study investigates the initial stiffness and stress distribution around the large-diameter rock-socketed piles under lateral loads. Based on the Serrano method, the Hoek–Brown strength criterion is extended to derive calculation formulas for rock cohesion and internal friction angle considering confining pressure effects. A three-dimensional numerical model was established using FLAC3D to analyze stress distribution, pile displacement, and p-y curves at different depths. Distribution functions for normal stress and shear stress around the pile were developed. Parameter sensitivity analysis reveals that the initial stiffness of p-y curves is primarily influenced by rock deformation modulus and pile diameter, while rock strength parameters and pile length effects are negligible. Empirical formulas for predicting initial stiffness of p-y curves were proposed through regression analysis. These results serve as both a theoretical basis and an engineering reference for the design and analysis of large-diameter rock-socketed piles under lateral loading. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)
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30 pages, 5018 KB  
Article
The Effect of an Earthquake on the Bearing Characteristics of a Soft-Rock-Embedded Bridge Pile with Sediment
by Xuefeng Ye, Xiaofang Ma, Huijuan Wang and Huina Chen
Buildings 2026, 16(2), 341; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020341 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 450
Abstract
Seismic action significantly affects the mechanical properties and failure characteristics of bridge pile foundations, soft rocks, and sediments. This study, by integrating shaking table tests, numerical simulations, and on-site monitoring, systematically analyzed the influence mechanisms of seismic intensity, sediment characteristics, and pile foundation [...] Read more.
Seismic action significantly affects the mechanical properties and failure characteristics of bridge pile foundations, soft rocks, and sediments. This study, by integrating shaking table tests, numerical simulations, and on-site monitoring, systematically analyzed the influence mechanisms of seismic intensity, sediment characteristics, and pile foundation layout on structural responses. Tests show that the 2.5-layer rock–sand pile exhibits nonlinear bearing degradation under seismic force: when the seismic acceleration increases from 0 to 100 m/s2, the bearing capacity of the pile foundation decreases by 55.3%, and the settlement increases from 3.2 mm to 18.5 mm. When the acceleration is ≥2 m/s2, the cohesion of the sand layer is destroyed, causing a semi-liquefied state. When it is ≥10 m/s2, the resistance loss reaches 80%. The increase in pore water pressure leads to dynamic settlement. When the seismic acceleration is greater than 50 m/s2, the shear modulus of the sand layer drops below 15% of its original value. The thickness of the sediment has a nearly linear relationship with the reduction rate of the bearing capacity. When the thickness increases from 0 to 1.4 cm, the reduction rate rises from 0% to 55.3%. When the thickness exceeds 0.8 cm, it enters the “danger zone”, and the bearing capacity decreases nonlinearly with the increase in thickness. The particle size is positively correlated with the reduction rate. The liquefaction risk of fine particles (<0.1 mm) is significantly higher than that of coarse particles (>0.2 mm). The load analysis of the pile cap shows that when the sediment depth is 140 cm, the final bearing capacity is 156,187.2 kN (reduction coefficient 0.898), and the maximum settlement is concentrated at the top point of the pile cap. Under the longitudinal seismic load of the pile group, the settlement growth rate of the piles containing sediment reached 67.16%, triggering the dual effect of “sediment–earthquake”. The lateral load leads to a combined effect of “torsional inclination”, and the stress at the top of the non-sediment pile reaches 6.41MPa. The seismic intensity (PGA) is positively correlated with the safety factor (FS) (FS increases from 1.209 to 37.654 when 10 m/s2→100 m/s2), while sediment thickness (h) is negatively correlated with FS (FS decreases from 2.510 to 1.209 when 0.05 m→0.20 m). The research results reveal the coupled control mechanism of sediment characteristics, seismic parameters, and pile foundation layout on seismic performance, providing key parameters and an optimization basis for bridge design in high-intensity areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)
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18 pages, 4008 KB  
Article
Numerical Study of the Negative Skin Friction (NSF) of Large-Diameter Rock-Socketed Monopiles for Offshore Wind Turbines Incorporating Lateral Loading Effects
by Yuanyuan Ren, Zhiwei Chen and Wenbo Zhu
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(8), 1530; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13081530 - 9 Aug 2025
Viewed by 959
Abstract
Large-diameter rock-socketed monopiles supporting offshore wind turbines in soft clay strata face significant geotechnical risks from negative skin friction (NFS) induced by construction surcharges. While the effects of NFS on axial drag loads are documented, the critical interaction between horizontal pile loading and [...] Read more.
Large-diameter rock-socketed monopiles supporting offshore wind turbines in soft clay strata face significant geotechnical risks from negative skin friction (NFS) induced by construction surcharges. While the effects of NFS on axial drag loads are documented, the critical interaction between horizontal pile loading and NFS development remains poorly understood. This research bridges this gap using a rigorously validated 3D finite element model that simulates the complex coupling of vertical substructure loads (5 MN), horizontal loading, and surcharge-induced consolidation. The model’s accuracy was confirmed through comprehensive verification against field data for both NFS evolution under surcharge and horizontal load–displacement behavior. The initial analysis under representative conditions (10 MN horizontal load, 100 kPa surcharge, 3600 days consolidation) revealed that horizontal loading fundamentally distorts NFS distribution in the upper pile segment (0 to −24 m), transforming smooth profiles into distinct dual-peak morphologies while increasing the maximum NFS magnitude by 57% (from −45.4 kPa to −71.5 kPa) and relocating its position 21 m upward. This redistribution was mechanistically linked to horizontal soil displacement patterns. Crucially, the NFS neutral plane remained invariant at the clay–rock interface (−39 m), demonstrating complete independence from horizontal loading effects. A systematic parametric study evaluated key operational factors: (1) consolidation time progressively increased NFS magnitude throughout the clay layer, evolving from near-linear to dual-peaked distributions in the upper clay (0 to −18 m); NFS stabilized in the upper clay after 720 days while continuing to increase in the lower clay (−18 to −39 m) due to downward surcharge transfer, accompanied by neutral plane deepening (from −36.5 m to −39.5 m) and 84% maximum axial force escalation (12.5 MN to 23 MN); (2) horizontal load magnitude amplified upper clay NFS peaks at −3.2 m and −9.3 m, with the shallow peak magnitude increasing linearly with load intensity, though it neither altered lower clay NFS nor neutral plane position; (3) surcharge magnitude increased overall NFS, but upper clay NFS (0 to −18 m) stabilized beyond 100 kPa, while lower clay NFS continued rising with higher surcharges, and the neutral plane descended progressively (from −38 m to −39.5 m). These findings demonstrate that horizontal loading critically exacerbates peak NFS values and redistributes friction in upper pile segments without influencing the neutral plane, whereas surcharge magnitude and consolidation time govern neutral plane depth, total NFS magnitude, and maximum drag load. This research delivers essential theoretical insights and practical guidelines for predicting NFS-induced drag loads and ensuring the long-term safety of offshore wind foundations in soft clays under complex multi-directional loading scenarios. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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22 pages, 9023 KB  
Article
Lateral Deformation Mechanisms of Piles in Coastal Regions Under Seawall Surcharge Loading and Mitigation Using Deep Cement Mixing (DCM) Piles
by Fei Huang, Zhiwei Chen, Huiyuan Deng and Wenbo Zhu
Buildings 2025, 15(11), 1936; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15111936 - 3 Jun 2025
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 1397
Abstract
In coastal regions with thick, soft soil deposits, bridge pile foundations are susceptible to lateral displacements induced by the construction of adjacent seawalls. This study employs a three-dimensional nonlinear finite element framework to investigate the lateral deformation mechanisms of rock-socketed bridge piles under [...] Read more.
In coastal regions with thick, soft soil deposits, bridge pile foundations are susceptible to lateral displacements induced by the construction of adjacent seawalls. This study employs a three-dimensional nonlinear finite element framework to investigate the lateral deformation mechanisms of rock-socketed bridge piles under seawall surcharge loading in soft soils, considering the effects of both immediate construction and long-term consolidation. A parametric analysis is performed to evaluate the effectiveness of deep cement mixing (DCM) piles in mitigating pile displacements, focusing on key design parameters, including DCM pile length, area replacement ratio, and elastic modulus. The results reveal that horizontal pile displacements peak at the pile head post-construction (25 days: 25 mm) and progressively decrease during consolidation, shifting the critical displacement zone to mid-pile depths (20 years: 12 mm). Bending moment analysis identifies persistent positive moments at the rock-socketed interface. Increasing pile stiffness marginally reduces displacements (a < 1 mm reduction for a 22% diameter increase), while expanding the seawall–pile distance to 110 m decreases displacements by 72–84%. DCM pile implementation significantly mitigates short-term (48% reduction) and long-term (54% reduction) displacements, with optimal thresholds at a 30% area replacement ratio and a 40.5 MPa elastic modulus. This study provides critical insights into time-dependent soil–pile interaction mechanisms and practical guidelines for optimizing coastal infrastructure design to minimize surcharge-induced impacts on adjacent pile foundations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)
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16 pages, 2659 KB  
Article
Influence of Roughness Factor on the Bearing Characteristics of Rock-Socketed Piles
by Zhilin Wang, Qingye Shi, Hongming Li, Tao Xiao, Zhihao Tang, Xiang Huang and Bai Yang
Buildings 2025, 15(11), 1785; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15111785 - 23 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 944
Abstract
With the rapid development of the national economy, the construction of super high-rise buildings, long-span bridges, high-speed railways, and transmission towers has become increasingly common. It is also more frequent to build structures on karst foundations, which imposes higher demands on foundation engineering, [...] Read more.
With the rapid development of the national economy, the construction of super high-rise buildings, long-span bridges, high-speed railways, and transmission towers has become increasingly common. It is also more frequent to build structures on karst foundations, which imposes higher demands on foundation engineering, especially pile foundations. To study the influence of the roughness factor (RF) on the bearing characteristics of rock-socketed pile, model pile load tests were conducted with different RF values (0.0, 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3) to reveal the failure modes of the test pile, analyze the characteristics of the load–displacement curves and the axial force and resistance exertion law of the pile, and discuss the influence of the RF on the ultimate bearing capacity of the test pile. Based on the load transfer law of test piles, a load transfer model considering the relative pile–soil displacement and the shear dilatancy effect of pile–rock is established to analyze its load transfer characteristics. The results show that the failure mode of the test pile is splitting failure. The load–displacement curves are upward concave and slowly varying. The pile side resistance and the pile tip resistance mainly bear the load on the pile top. As the load on the pile top increases, the pile tip resistance gradually comes into play, and when the ultimate load is reached, the pile tip resistance bears 72.12% to 79.22% of the upper load. The pile side resistance is mainly borne by the rock-socketed section, and the pile side resistance increases sharply after entering the rock layer, but it decreases slightly with increasing depth, and the peak point is located in the range of 1.25D below the soil–rock interface. Increasing the roughness of the pile can greatly improve the ultimate bearing capacity. In this study, the ultimate bearing capacity of the test pile shows a trend of increasing and then decreasing with the gradual increase in RF from 0.0 to 0.3, and the optimal RF is 0.2. The load transfer model of pile–soil relative displacement and pile–rock shear dilatancy effect, as well as the pile tip load calculation model, were established. The calculation results were compared with the test results and engineering measured data, respectively, and they are in good agreement. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Building Foundation Engineering)
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25 pages, 13064 KB  
Article
Study on the Underpinning Technology for Fixed Piers of Concrete Box Girder Bridges on Mountainous Expressways
by Honglin Ran, Lin Li, Yi Wei, Penglin Xiao and Hongyun Yang
Buildings 2025, 15(7), 1031; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15071031 - 24 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1576
Abstract
To address the challenge of repairing the damage to concrete box girder bridge piers on mountainous highways caused by falling rocks, this paper proposes an active underpinning technique that integrates a “井”-shaped cap system, graded preloading of the foundation, and synchronized beam body [...] Read more.
To address the challenge of repairing the damage to concrete box girder bridge piers on mountainous highways caused by falling rocks, this paper proposes an active underpinning technique that integrates a “井”-shaped cap system, graded preloading of the foundation, and synchronized beam body correction. The technique utilizes lateral beam preloading (to eliminate the inelastic deformation of the new pile foundation) and longitudinal beam connections (to form overall stiffness). The method involves building temporary and permanent support systems in stages. Through the two-stage temporary support system transition, the removal and in situ reconstruction of the old piers, a smooth transition from the pier–beam consolidation system to the basin-type bearing system is achieved while simultaneously performing precise correction of beam torsion. The structural safety during the construction process was verified through finite element simulations and dynamic monitoring. Monitoring results show that the beam torsion recovery effect is significant (maximum lift of 5.2 mm/settlement of 7.9 mm), and the pier strain (−54.5~−51.3 με) remains within a controllable range. Before the bridge was opened to traffic, vehicle load and impact load tests were conducted. The actual measured strength and vertical stiffness of the main beam structure meet the design requirements, with relative residual deformation less than 20%, indicating that the structure is in good, elastic working condition. The vehicle running and braking dynamic coefficients (μ = 0.058~0.171 and 0.103~0.163) are both lower than the theoretical value of 0.305. The study shows that this technique enables the rapid and safe repair of bridge piers and provides important references for similar engineering projects. Full article
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27 pages, 12396 KB  
Article
Research on Bearing Capacity Characteristics of Cave Piles
by Lixin Ou, Yufeng Huang, Xu Chen, Yang Xue, Qingfu Li and Biao Guo
Buildings 2025, 15(1), 143; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15010143 - 6 Jan 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1875
Abstract
To investigate the load-bearing characteristics of a pile foundation with multiple piles passing through karst caves and the extent of the caves’ influence, this study takes the Qihe Bridge, a key project of the second section of the Anhe Expressway, as a case [...] Read more.
To investigate the load-bearing characteristics of a pile foundation with multiple piles passing through karst caves and the extent of the caves’ influence, this study takes the Qihe Bridge, a key project of the second section of the Anhe Expressway, as a case study. Field tests on the bearing capacity of the pile foundation, passing through underlying karst caves, were conducted. Piles passing through the caves were selected as test piles, and a finite element analysis of the Qihe Bridge pile foundation structure was performed using Midas GTS NX 2022 software. After verifying the accuracy of the software’s calculation results, this study further explored the distribution patterns of factors such as axial force, side friction resistance, settlement, and relative displacement between the pile and soil with respect to the position of the pile. Special attention was given to monitoring locations at the interface between rock and soil layers, as well as within the depth range of the karst caves. The horizontal axial force on the piles was found to increase with the depth of the caves. By analyzing the distribution patterns of axial force, side friction resistance, settlement, and pile–soil relative displacement, the study clarifies the mechanism by which karst caves affect the load-bearing behavior of pile foundations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)
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17 pages, 3875 KB  
Article
Construction Safety Risk Assessment of High-Pile Wharf: A Case Study in China
by Ziwen Wang and Yuan Yuan
Buildings 2024, 14(5), 1189; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14051189 - 23 Apr 2024
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3024
Abstract
The complexity of the wharf components and the harshness of the offshore construction environment increase the safety risk of hazards, which has highlighted the importance and urgency of safety risk management in high-pile wharf constructions. This paper established a visualized digital construction safety [...] Read more.
The complexity of the wharf components and the harshness of the offshore construction environment increase the safety risk of hazards, which has highlighted the importance and urgency of safety risk management in high-pile wharf constructions. This paper established a visualized digital construction safety risk model for high-pile wharf based on a so-called FAHP method (the combination of fuzzy comprehensive evaluation (FCE) and analytic hierarchy process (AHP) methods). The construction safety risk indicators were constructed as the target layer, the principle layer and the scheme layer, and then the corresponding safety risk assessment algorithm was established. The physical, functional and safety risk assessment parameters of the component in the BIM model were employed to the safety risk assessment algorithm, and the risk assessment level of each sub-process was subsequently classified. The case study indicated that the high-pile wharf construction project included five elements in principle layer and 15 risk indicators in the scheme layer. Moreover, it was demonstrated that the sub-processes with the highest construction risk level were steel pipe pile sinking in wharf construction and steel pipe pile, steel sheath-immersed pile sinking and embedded rock pile construction in approaches to bridge construction with a risk level of III. In this way, the quantitative visualization of the construction safety risk was effectively realized, which facilitates the safety risk management of construction sites and timely warning and response to unexpected safety accidents. Full article
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18 pages, 7209 KB  
Article
Ultimate Load-Bearing Capacity and Sustainable Performance of Pile Foundations of Yanji Suspension Bridge in Fault Zone Based on Refined Geological Model
by Meng Ren, Jiaqi Cheng, Shengbin Zhang, Yutao Pang and Weiyuan Zhu
Sustainability 2024, 16(5), 1858; https://doi.org/10.3390/su16051858 - 23 Feb 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2466
Abstract
Pile foundation is the most important foundation type of long-span bridges, of which the ultimate load-bearing capacity affects the safety and sustainable performance of bridges. When constructing large-span bridges, the bridge site may be close to the adjacent fault zones, which seriously affects [...] Read more.
Pile foundation is the most important foundation type of long-span bridges, of which the ultimate load-bearing capacity affects the safety and sustainable performance of bridges. When constructing large-span bridges, the bridge site may be close to the adjacent fault zones, which seriously affects the safety and long-term performance of pile foundations, causing the failure and unsustainability of long-span bridges in their life-cycle service life. At present, there are no engineering design rules or methods for assessing the load-bearing capacity of the pile foundation near the fault zones. To study the influence of the fault zone on the loading-bearing capacity and sustainable performance of pile foundations, triaxial compression tests were carried out on the mylonite at the Yanji suspension bridge site near the Xiangfan–Guangji fault zone in Hubei Province. The mechanical properties of mylonite were reflected by the Mohr–Coulomb yield criterion, and a topographic and geological modeling method based on the multi-platform was established. Then, the ABAQUS finite element software was used to study the deformation, stress, failure modes, and sustainable performance of the pile foundation under different bridge load levels, analyze the safety of the pile foundation in the fracture zone, and summarize the ultimate bearing characteristics of the pile foundation. The results show that the whole pile and surrounding rock are basically elastic under the pressure of the designed load, the plastic zone of the pile foundation is mainly concentrated at the pile bottom, and the shear stress concentration zone of the pile is mainly manifested in the joint of the cap and pile and the interface between soft and hard rock. When the load is increased to 4 times the designed load, the stress concentration area of the pile body gradually shifts upward from the pile bottom, and the surrounding rock at the bottom forms an “X-shaped” shear failure zone. After 100 years of operation, the maximum compressive stress of piles reaches 28.6 MPa, which is 120% higher than that at the beginning of the bridge construction, indicating that the sustainable performance of the piles can withstand the effect of the fault zone over the designed service years. Full article
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16 pages, 3450 KB  
Article
Field Measurement and Theoretical Analysis of Sidewall Roughness on Shaft Resistance of Rock-Socketed Piles
by Jun Liu, Zhongwei Li, Guoliang Dai and Weiming Gong
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2023, 11(8), 1622; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11081622 - 19 Aug 2023
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 3166
Abstract
Sidewall roughness is a key factor influencing the shaft resistance of rock-socketed piles. Owing to the difficulties in onsite measuring and the inconsistency in quantitatively characterizing the roughness degree of sidewalls, existing approaches for estimating the shaft resistance of rock-socketed piles often cannot [...] Read more.
Sidewall roughness is a key factor influencing the shaft resistance of rock-socketed piles. Owing to the difficulties in onsite measuring and the inconsistency in quantitatively characterizing the roughness degree of sidewalls, existing approaches for estimating the shaft resistance of rock-socketed piles often cannot take this factor into account. Based on the measured surface curves of the 68 sockets in No. 6# and 7# group piles of the Chishi Bridge on the Ru-Chen Expressway in China, sidewall roughness is described by introducing the roughness factor (RF) based on the Horvath and Monash models, respectively, while a statistical analysis of the sidewall roughness in rock-socketed sections is also conducted. In addition, an analytical solution to the shaft resistance of rock-socketed piles with consideration of sidewall roughness and the relative settlement of the pile–rocks interface (∆s), is proposed and further compared with the field load tests. The results showed that: the RF obtained by the Horvath model is bigger than that obtained by the Monash model; the larger RF is, the bigger the mobilized shaft resistance; the analytical solution generally overestimates the mobilized shaft resistance of rock-socketed piles under the same ∆s, and the deviation is less than 15% if ∆s is larger than 3.00 mm. The Horvath model is recommended to quantitatively characterize the roughness degree of sidewalls for its good operability in practice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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16 pages, 7929 KB  
Article
Calculation Model of Vertical Bearing Capacity of Rock-Embedded Piles Based on the Softening of Pile Side Friction Resistance
by Erdi Abi, Li Shen, Mingwei Liu, Hongbo Du, Dan Shu and Yafeng Han
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2023, 11(5), 939; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11050939 - 27 Apr 2023
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 3102
Abstract
Rock-socketed pile is widely used in coastal wharf, Marine bridge, and Marine power engineering, and the end bearing function is considered more in the design process. However, the lateral friction resistance of rock-socketed piles is an important bearing part, and the load transfer [...] Read more.
Rock-socketed pile is widely used in coastal wharf, Marine bridge, and Marine power engineering, and the end bearing function is considered more in the design process. However, the lateral friction resistance of rock-socketed piles is an important bearing part, and the load transfer mechanism of the pile–soft rock interface is an important research focus. In this paper, a comparative analysis was adopted in the test, and ten groups of test specimens were made, including five groups of natural and saturated mudstone specimens, respectively. The characteristics of interfacial load transfer were analyzed through the shear test of a pile–mudstone interface. A calculation model for the vertical bearing capacity of rock-socketed piles based on the softening of lateral friction resistance was established, and the effects of interface relative displacement, lateral positive pressure, pile length, and pile stiffness on the vertical bearing capacity of rock-socketed piles were analyzed. The results show that the shear strength of the pile–rock interface is lower than that of the mudstone interface, and the interfacial shear strength shows the characteristics of “first increasing, then decreasing, and finally flattening with the increase of shear displacement”. The vertical ultimate bearing capacity and residual bearing capacity under saturation were 89.49% and 89.73% of the natural state, respectively. With the increase of pile side pressure, the proportion of pile side friction resistance increased by 39.96%, and the pile side friction resistance was fully exerted. With the increase of pile length, the vertical ultimate bearing capacity of pile foundation increased, and the residual bearing capacity change value increased from 6.80% to 16.97%. However, the increase in pile stiffness had little effect on the vertical bearing capacity. The calculation model can provide a certain reference for the design and calculation of rock-socketed piles in soft rock areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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12 pages, 41993 KB  
Article
Experimental Study on the Bearing Performance of Rock-Socketed Concrete-Filled Steel Tube Piles under Horizontal Cyclic Loading
by Mingwei Liu, Fayou Wu, Erdi Abi, Linjian Wu, Yafeng Han, Nirui Chen and Jue Chen
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2023, 11(4), 788; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11040788 - 5 Apr 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3256
Abstract
Rock-socketed concrete-filled steel tube piles (RSCFSTs), which have been widely used in harbors, bridges, and offshore wind turbines, were exposed to horizontal cyclic loading during service and suffered fatigue damage. For the RSCFSTs, longitudinal steel bars were welded to the inner wall of [...] Read more.
Rock-socketed concrete-filled steel tube piles (RSCFSTs), which have been widely used in harbors, bridges, and offshore wind turbines, were exposed to horizontal cyclic loading during service and suffered fatigue damage. For the RSCFSTs, longitudinal steel bars were welded to the inner wall of the steel tube to enhance the bonding strength of the steel tube and concrete core interface. It is essential to research the bearing performance of RSCFSTs like this, under horizontal cyclic loading. In this paper, cyclic loading tests of RSCFSTs under horizontal loading were carried out. The failure patterns of RSCFSTs during the destabilization process were generalized, and the lateral displacement development law of RSCFSTs was analyzed. The interfacial bonding characteristics between the steel tube and concrete core during the test were also discussed. Results showed that the horizontal bearing capacity of RSCFSTs decreases nonlinearly with the increase in the equal amplitude of load, and the development process of the lateral displacement-cycle number curve was divided into three phases: (I) rapid growth period, (II) fatigue growth period, and (III) sharp growth period. The larger the horizontal load was, the faster the lateral displacement entered the fatigue growth period. The duration of the rapid growth period and fatigue damage period accounts for about 90% of the total life of RSCFSTs. The stiffening form of the longitudinal steel bars welded to the inner wall of the steel tube can realize the synergistic force between the upper steel tube and the concrete core of RSCFSTs, which accounts for about 7/10 of the length of RSCFSTs. The depth of the steel tube, foundation stiffness, and bonding performance between the steel tube and the concrete core were the key factors that affected the horizontal bearing performance of RSCFSTs. Finally, some constructive suggestions are proposed for the design of RSCFSTs, including increasing steel tube embedded depth, adding a sniffer bar between the steel tube and concrete interface, etc. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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12 pages, 4906 KB  
Article
Seismic Response Analysis of Rock-Socketed Piles in Karst Areas under Vertical Loads
by Peisen Wang, Puyang Zhang, Wenjun Hu and Dapeng Qiu
Appl. Sci. 2023, 13(2), 784; https://doi.org/10.3390/app13020784 - 5 Jan 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2796
Abstract
Karst landforms constitute one of the most harmful geological conditions, which have an adverse effect on the deep foundation structures of bridges. During earthquakes, the existence of karst caves can cause serious seismic damage to the bridge pile foundation. In order to investigate [...] Read more.
Karst landforms constitute one of the most harmful geological conditions, which have an adverse effect on the deep foundation structures of bridges. During earthquakes, the existence of karst caves can cause serious seismic damage to the bridge pile foundation. In order to investigate the seismic response of rock-socketed piles under vertical loads in complex karst cave conditions, finite element numerical simulation analyses were carried out, referring to the practical major bridge structure rock-socketed pile project in China. The peak strain distributions of rock-socketed pile foundation influenced by single-karst cave factors under the combined action of vertical loads and ground motions were investigated, and the influences of complex multi-caves were further explored. The results showed that the restraint effect of the bedrock near the pile would gradually decrease with the increase of the height of the karst cave and the decrease of the height of the karst cave roof; under the condition of a beaded karst cave, the constraint of bedrock between the karst caves makes the pile present the distribution characteristics of “multi-segment and multi-broken line”; under the condition of an underlying karst cave, the existence of the underlying karst cave would decrease the restraint of the bedrock at the bottom pile and increase the peak strain of the pile to a certain extent. This paper revealed the seismic response law of the rock-socketed pile under vertical loads within various complex karst cave conditions and developed reasonable reinforcement measures aiming at dangerous locations, providing important engineering guidance and a reference for the seismic design of rock-socketed pile foundation in complex karst areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering: Current Progress and Road Ahead)
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18 pages, 7647 KB  
Article
Experimental and Numerical Analysis of Pile–Rock Interaction Characteristics of Steel Pipe Piles Penetrating into Coral Reef Limestone
by Yongtao Zhang, Zhiqiang Deng, Peishuai Chen, Huiwu Luo, Ruiyuan Zhang, Chengcheng Yu and Caizhao Zhan
Sustainability 2022, 14(21), 13761; https://doi.org/10.3390/su142113761 - 24 Oct 2022
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 3493
Abstract
In order to study the characteristics of pile–rock action of steel pipe driven pile in coral reef limestone stratum, coral reef limestone at the China–Maldives Friendship Bridge site was selected to carry out indoor physical and model tests with red sandstone as the [...] Read more.
In order to study the characteristics of pile–rock action of steel pipe driven pile in coral reef limestone stratum, coral reef limestone at the China–Maldives Friendship Bridge site was selected to carry out indoor physical and model tests with red sandstone as the control group. The test outcomes indicate the following: (1) when substantial deformation is permitted, the coral reef limestone has a considerable strength dispersion, a low post-peak stress decrease rate, and a high residual strength, roughly 30% of the peak strength; (2) when the steel pipe pile penetrates the coral reef limestone, the pile top load shows an obvious sawtooth shape, and with the increase in penetration depth, the pile end load of the high-porosity rock sample gradually decreases, and the pile end load of the low-porosity rock sample gradually increases; (3) when the steel pipe pile is penetrated, the strain value of the red sandstone is about twice that of the coral reef limestone at the same position from the steel pipe pile. These findings indicate that the high porosity and heterogeneity cementation characteristics of the coral reef limestone make the extrusion effect during piling significantly less than that of the red sandstone. In addition, the steel pipe pile penetration process is numerically simulated using a four-dimensional discrete spring model method based on the multi-body damage criterion. The numerical simulation results further demonstrate that the pile-side rock fragmentation during steel pipe pile penetration is the primary reason for the lower bearing capacity of steel pipe piles in coral reef limestone stratums. This method provides a novel approach for studying the mechanical properties of reef limestone. The findings can serve as a guide for the design and construction of steel pipe piles in the reef limestone stratum. Full article
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