Abstract

Occurred damages on the bridge piers during earthquakes lead to significant financial losses worldwide every year and can cause social problems by disrupting traffic flow and transportation services. Rocking isolation of foundations is one of the damage reduction approaches to avoid structural damage on piers by transferring plastic hinges from piers to underlying soil media. The behavior of rocking foundations on non-plastic silts has not been investigated well until now in the literature. In this research, the characteristic seismic behavior of a bridge pier considering rocking isolation is evaluated using small-scale physical modeling tests. To this aim, eight shaking table tests (with sinusoidal excitations) are conducted where both sandy and silty materials are employed as the soil media. In addition to the effects of the underlying soil, the effects of the critical contact area ratio of the foundation and frequency of input motions are evaluated. Achieved results indicate that the considered bridge pier shows the same behavior trend for underlying silty soil and sandy one. However, because of the frequency-dependent behavior of non-plastic silty soil, the pier attracts lower accelerations and higher moments. Therefore, the achieved results show that the proposed design approaches of rocking foundations that are mostly extracted based on experimental studies on sands (or rarely on clay) can lead to non-conservative designs in silty soils.

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