Abstract

Cyclic loading of deep foundations and soil anchorage elements can lead to failure by accumulation of deformations or loss of strength. Snakeskin-inspired surfaces have been shown to mobilise direction-dependent friction angles and volumetric responses due to their asymmetric profile. This paper presents an investigation on the cyclic interface element behavior of sand-structure interfaces with snakeskin-inspired surfaces with the goal of understanding the potential impact of these surfaces on the cyclic behavior of geotechnical elements. Load- and displacement-controlled cyclic interface shear tests were performed with constant stiffness boundary conditions. Four different snakeskin-inspired surfaces and reference rough and smooth surfaces were tested. The results show that under symmetric shear stress cycles, failure always takes place in the caudal direction (i.e. along the scales) due to the smaller interface friction angles. A shear stress bias can produce a change in the failure direction to the cranial one (i.e. against the scales). An equation is introduced to predict the magnitude of shear stress bias that changes the failure direction. This investigation shows that the snakeskin-inspired surfaces can be used to control the direction of failure of soil-structure interface elements which can help in increasing the cyclic stability and reducing the susceptibility of brittle failure.

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