Abstract

ABSTRACT The full-length bond wood tensile anchor system (WTS) conventionally used in earthen sites is primarily broken by the debonding of the bolt–slurry interface. To solve this limitation, material performance and pull-out tests were performed for a new type of wood tension–compression composite anchor system (WTCS) and WTS, and the strain of the bolt–slurry and the slurry–soil interface were monitored. A comparison of test results indicated the following: The average pull-out force of the WTCS is approximately 23–51% higher than that of the WTS. The WTCS has the strong ductility characteristics of small elastic and large plastic deformation. As the load increases, the strain at the bolt–slurry interface changes from a negative index of low strain to a high-strain “S” curve at the end along the bond length. The peak value of slurry–soil interface strain exhibits a transition from the front part of bond length to the middle and back parts of bond length. The mechanical operating mechanism between bolt and slurry is divided into three simplified progressive structural force models, namely “1,” “T,” and “Y.” Finally, the calculation formulas of the average pull-out force of the WTCS are provided.

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