Abstract
For an offshore photovoltaic helical pile foundation, significant horizontal cyclic loading is imposed by wind and waves. To study a fixed offshore PV helical pile’s horizontal cyclic bearing performance, a numerical model of the helical pile under horizontal cyclic loading was established using an elastic–plastic boundary interface constitutive model of the clay soil. This model was compared with a monopile of the same diameter under similar conditions. The study examined the effects of horizontal cyclic loading amplitude, period, and vertical loads on the horizontal cyclic bearing performance. The results show that under horizontal monotonic loading, the bearing capacities of a helical pile and monopile in a serviceability limit state are quite similar. However, as the amplitude of horizontal cyclic loading increases, soil stiffness deteriorates significantly, leading to greater horizontal displacement accumulation for both types of piles. The helical pile’s bearing capacity under horizontal cyclic loadings is approximately 60% of that under monotonic loading. With shorter cyclic loading periods, horizontal displacement accumulates rapidly in the initial stage and stabilizes over a shorter duration. In contrast, longer cyclic loading periods lead to slower initial displacement accumulation, but the total accumulated displacement at stabilization is greater. When vertical loads are applied, the helical pile exhibits more stable horizontal cyclic bearing performance than the monopile.
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