Abstract

Penetration of skirts is an essential design issue for offshore skirted foundations and anchors in sand. Skirts may not penetrate far enough into dense sand by the available submerged weight alone. It may therefore be necessary to apply underpressure inside the skirt compartment to produce an increased driving force and to reduce the penetration resistance. This paper recommends procedures to calculate penetration resistance and required underpressure for skirts penetrated in dense sand with and without interbedded clay layers. The recommendations are based on interpretation of skirt penetration data from prototypes, field model tests, and laboratory model tests in dense sand. The paper first presents a model to calculate the penetration resistance of skirts penetrated by weight, or other external vertical load that does not cause flow of water in the sand. Two models are considered; one based on bearing capacity equations with friction angles from laboratory tests, and the other one based on empirical correlations with CPT tip resistance. The bearing capacity model gives more consistent correlations with the empirical data than the CPT model. Thereafter, a model to account for the effect of underpressure applied inside the skirt compartment is proposed. This model is developed based on interpretation of available prototype and model test data from skirts penetrated by underpressure. The results show that underpressure facilitates skirt penetration in sand considerably by providing both an additional penetration force and a reduced penetration resistance. It is also shown that interbedded clay layers can prevent flow of water through the sand and eliminate the beneficial reduction in penetration resistance.

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