Abstract

The tripod bucket jacket foundation is proven to be a practicable solution for offshore wind turbines (OWTs) to withstand huge environmental loads in deep water. This paper presents model tests for a scaled tripod bucket jacket foundation with reference to a prototype applied in China to obtain its lateral load bearing behavior in medium-dense sands. Extended finite element analyses were conducted by ABAQUS to compare anti-overturning responses for the tripod bucket foundation in both sand and soft clay, and the influences of loading direction and aspect ratio were also taken into account. The results showed that the failure modes of the laterally loaded tripod bucket foundation are the pull-out of the windward bucket in sand and the settlement of the leeward bucket in soft clay, respectively. Thus, the unfavorable loading direction of the foundation changes with soil type. It is also shown that the bearing capacity for the foundation in soft clay will be enhanced more effectively as the bucket diameter increases. Instead of the rotational soil resistance resulting from the rotation of the bucket, the vertical soil resistance governs the anti-overturning bearing capacity of a tripod bucket foundation. As the tilt created by the overturning moment rises, the rotational stiffness of the foundation dramatically declines.

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