Abstract

An experimental investigation was carried out to evaluate the thermal exposure effect on load carrying capacity and creep behavior of steel piles embedded in ice-poor frozen soils using steel-soil interface tests. The interface testing was conducted in a walk-in cold room to enable testing at various temperatures below the freezing point. A series of stress-displacement curves were established at different temperatures and under various normal stresses. The results showed a significant reduction in adfreeze strength of the pile-soil interface as the exposure surface temperature increased. The interface strength decreased approximately 300% when the exposure temperature increased from −1.5 °C to 0 °C. Such condition may be witnessed in warm permafrost that experience temperature ranging from −3 °C to 0 °C. The shear stress–strain curves showed a brittle behavior followed by significant loss of bearing capacity. Pile creep rate in ice-poor soils increased by about 60% when the interface was exposed to warming from −10 °C to −5 °C and showed tertiary creep when reaching −4 °C.

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