Abstract

Arch dams are typically built in the mountain and gorge regions with complex terrain. In the current engineering practice, foundation models are commonly simplified as the half-space with the canyon of regular geometry. The complex topography conditions above the dam crest are neglected. This study investigates the effect of realistic valley topography on the dynamic response of arch dams. The direct finite element method is generalized and applied to the dam-reservoir-foundation system with realistic valley topography. The input ground motions are transformed into the effective earthquake loads at the truncated boundaries by performing several dynamic reaction calculations using one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) auxiliary finite element models. The effect of valley topography on the seismic response of the Baihetan arch dam is evaluated as a case study. Results indicate that the valley topographic irregularities significantly influence the dynamic responses of the arch dam, including relative displacement and stress distribution. Notably, the valley topography effect on the seismic response of arch dams depends on the incident ground motions and is hardly predicted in advance, demonstrating the necessity to account for the realistic topography conditions.

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