Abstract

Plate and screw anchors provide a significant uplift capacity and have multiple applications in both onshore and offshore geotechnical engineering. Uplift design methods are mostly based on semi-empirical approaches assuming a failure mechanism, a normal and a shear stress distribution at failure and empirical factors back-calculated against experimental data. However, these design methods are shown to under- or overpredict most of the existing larger scale experimental tests. Numerical FE simulations are undertaken to provide new insight into the failure mechanism and stress distribution which should be considered in anchor design in dense sand. Results show that a conical shallow wedge whose inclination to the vertical direction is equal to the dilation angle is a good approximation of the failure mechanism in sand. This shallow mechanism has been observed in each case for relative embedment ratios (depth/diameter) ranging from 1 to 9. However, the stress distribution varies non-linearly with depth, due to the soil deformability and progressive failure. A sharp peak of normal and shear stress can be identified close to the anchor edge, before a gradual decrease with increasing distance along the shear plane. The peak stress magnitude increases almost linearly with embedment depth at larger relative embedment ratios. Although further research is necessary, these results lay the basis for the development of a new generation of design criteria for determining anchor capacity at the ultimate limiting state.

Highlights

  • Plate and screw anchors are mainly used in geotechnical engineering to secure man-made structures against significant uplift loads

  • Uplift simulations of plate anchors embedded in dense sand and relative embedment ratios ranging from 1 to 9 were carried out

  • FE simulations of circular flat plates embedded in dense sand at different embedment ratios have been undertaken

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Summary

Introduction

Plate and screw anchors are mainly used in geotechnical engineering to secure man-made structures against significant uplift loads. They are mainly used onshore to stabilise light structures such as transmission towers [1] or residential buildings [2]. Plate anchors can provide a combined lateral and vertical capacity for loads which are inclined, as the plate rotates (‘keys’) to be perpendicular to the direction of load application. Screw anchors are composed of one or several helices attached to a shaft They are literally screwed into the soil through the application of a torque combined with a vertical ‘crowd’ force in order to ensure a constant rotation to advancement rate [5]. The uplift capacity is mainly provided by the helix, whose reaction with the soil generates a wedge-type shallow failure mechanism, similar to a plate anchor

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