Abstract

Footing on slope is a prevalent construction encountered in geotechnical engineering, and its safety is receiving increased attention. A natural rainfall event will inevitably have adverse influences on the stability and bearing capacity of strip footings lying on slopes; however, the conventional practice to simulate the rainfall is realized by varying the soil moisture content and the actual rainfall characteristics cannot be fully reflected. As a result, the finite element (FE) software ABAQUS is employed in this study to model the temporally varying rainfall, and the bearing capacity, as well as failure mode of the strip footing placed at the top of slopes, is estimated accordingly. A series of FE analyses are carried out to quantify the influences of rainfall pattern, rainfall intensity, soil strength properties (i.e., effective cohesion c′ and effective friction angle φ′) and several geometric parameters associated with the location of embedded footing with B in width, such as the edge distance ratio L/B and the embedded depth ratio D/B. Results show that the bearing capacity will be decreased and the failure mode evidently changes under rainfall condition. Moreover, it is noted that the rainfall pattern produces less substantial impact on the bearing capacity and failure mode, compared with the rainfall intensity.

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