Abstract

Landfill failure threatens the safety of surrounding cities and causes soil and water pollution. High water levels can usually spur landfill failure. With the presence of earthquake, landfill instability is triggered in a greater possibility. However, the dynamic response and failure mechanism of landfills with high water level subjected to earthquakes are not yet clearly understood, and relevant experimental studies are quite scarce. This study includes a series of seismic centrifuge tests to investigate the seismic response of the landfill at different water levels. An improved method is proposed to prepare synthetic municipal solid wastes (MSWs) with similar static-dynamic properties to the actual MSWs. The failure and evolution mechanism of landfills with high water levels induced by the earthquake is revealed. Significant transitions are observed in the dynamic response of deformation, acceleration, and pore-water pressure as the water level changes. With the rise of water level, the settlement at the top of the landfill decreases first and then increases, while the horizontal displacement at the toe increases slowly, followed by a sudden drop; the acceleration amplification coefficient in the middle of the landfill increases first and then decreases; the dynamic pore-water pressure gradually decreases from positive to negative, but oscillates at the moderate water level. Three failure criteria and a hydro-earthquake coupled failure limit are proposed to demonstrate the combined effect of water level and earthquake on landfill stability. The test results provide a basis to establish seismic failure standards for landfills with different water levels and guide the seismic instability design of landfills with high water level.

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