Abstract

In this paper, an experimental, numerical and analytical study is conducted on a 2 × 1 bored pile group on saturated sand under combined loading. Initially, a single-degree-of-freedom system founded on the pile group is tested at the ETH Zurich drum centrifuge under vertical, lateral and pushover loading, gaining insights and deriving benchmark results for validation of finite-element (FE) models. The latter account for non-linear soil–pile interaction, using hypoplasticity for sand and appropriate modelling of interfaces and pile response. Combining centrifuge and FE modelling, the governing resistance mechanisms are identified and quantified. The transition from model to prototype scale is achieved after careful consideration of scale effects. The concrete damaged plasticity model is employed to model the non-linear response of the reinforced concrete (RC) piles, accounting for axial load dependency of bending moment capacity. The prototype problem is studied parametrically, deriving failure envelopes for different levels of vertical loading. Distinguishable failure modes are identified, and the contribution of different resistance mechanisms is quantified. Finally, analytical failure envelopes are derived based on limit equilibrium, expanding Broms’ theory to pile groups under combined loading. Accounting for the axial load dependency of RC bending moment capacity, the proposed closed-form solutions provide a useful design tool for engineering practice.

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