Abstract

With the development of urban underground space, green and efficient excavation supporting structures are receiving increasing attention. Prefabricated recyclable supporting structures (PRSSs) have been developed for this reason. A deep circular excavation supported by PRSSs in low-plasticity clay (CL) was extensively instrumented to explore its deformation characteristics. Measurement results showed that the lateral displacement of the supporting piles (δhp) presented a typical cumulative pattern dominated by deep inward movement. The maximum lateral displacements of the supporting piles (δhpm) varied between 0.28%H–0.52%H (H is the excavation depth). The maximum lateral pile displacements mostly occurred above the excavation surface, ranging from H + 0.5 m to H − 7.0 m. The soils 3 m and 10 m from the excavation had the largest lateral displacement at the top and a cantilever shape. The ground surface settlements tended to follow a convex pattern. The maximum ground surface settlements (δvm) were normalised by the final excavation depth (He) on the east and south sides, and determined to be 0.43% and 0.50%, respectively. The ratio δvm/δhpm tended to increase as excavation and dewatering proceeded, with a value of 0.49–1.15. The ground surface settlement due to dewatering was 19% of the maximum settlement.

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