Tutorial 09 Importing Slide Files + SSR
Tutorial 09 Importing Slide Files + SSR
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Both methods provide identical functionality for importing Slide data files into Phase2.
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After selecting the Slide data file that you wish to import, you will see a dialog with options pertaining to how you wish to import the file.
In general, you will simply press OK, but there might be instances where you wish to modify boundaries, customize the mesh, or not start by running a Shear Strength Reduction (SSR) analysis to determine the factor of safety of your slope. In which case, you can use this dialog to customize how the Slide file is imported. After the import, you might see a warning dialog such as:
Not all functionality in Slide is supported by Phase2. Certain material and support models are not supported (see below). If a Slide model contains unsupported functionality, a warning dialog is issued. In this case, the user must change the material or support models to one supported by Phase2. The method for defining material and support models is very similar between Slide and Phase2, so the user should have no problem changing the model.
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Groundwater
Phase2 supports the definition of pore pressures using piezometric lines, Ru, water pressure grids, and steady-state finite element groundwater seepage analysis. The properties and settings for all these techniques are properly read from the Slide file during import.
Boundaries
The Slide external boundary and material boundaries are all read into Phase2. The water table is read into Phase2 but since Phase2 does not support a specific water table entity, it is converted to a piezometric line with id equal to 1. Piezometric lines are read directly into Phase2. Water pressure grids are read into Phase2. Tension crack polylines are NOT read into Phase2.
Tension Cracks
The explicit modeling of a tension crack region is not directly supported in Phase2 since no facilities exist in the finite-element method for a zero strength material with possible hydrostatic forces applied to the surface of a tension crack. Consequently, how one models a tension crack zone using a finite-element analysis is open to debate.
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One method that has been used successfully (see Verification#27 in the Phase2 Slope Stability Verification manual), is to represent the soil in the tension crack region as a distributed load applied to the soil underlying the tension crack zone. This works well for dry tension cracks but water filled tension cracks is another issue.
Material Properties
The following Slide material models are supported: 1) Mohr-Coulomb, 2) Undrained (Constant), 3) Undrained F(datum), 4) Infinite Strength, 5) Shear-Normal Function, 6) Hoek-Brown, 7) Generalized Hoek-Brown, 8) Power Curve. The following Slide material models are not supported: 1) Undrained F(depth), 2) No Strength, 3) Anisotropic Strength, 4) Anisotropic Function, 5) Vertical Stress Ratio, 6) Barton-Bandis, 7) Hyperbolic, 8) Discrete Function, 9) Drained-Undrained. The Shear-Normal function is supported by fitting a Generalized HoekBrown envelope to the discrete data points. The Power Curve function is supported by converting it to the Generalized Hoek-Brown failure criterion. The Anisotropic Strength and Anisotropic Function set the material type to Mohr-Coulomb and set the strength as being the minimum of the different directions. Anisotropy in strength is not supported in Phase2.
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Slide support models that are imported into Phase2 are: 1) End Anchored, 2) Geotextiles, 3) Grouted Tieback, 4) Soil Nail. Support models which are NOT imported: 1) Grouted Tieback (with friction), 2) Micro-Pile. End anchored or deadman anchors are read in as Phase2 end-anchored bolts. Peak capacity of the Phase2 bolt is set to the Slide anchor capacity, the residual capacity is set to zero. The bolt spacing is read from the Slide file. Geotextiles will convert to structural interfaces with Phase2 liner elements being defined as geotextiles with a default tensile modulus and a peak tensile capacity. The peak tensile capacity is read from the Slide geotextile support properties. The residual tensile strength is set to zero. The tensile modulus is given a default value equal to 100 times the tensile strength. The user should define the appropriate tensile modulus for the geogrid/geotextile they are using. See the online help for a description of this parameter. If the Slide Shear Strength Model for the geotextile-soil interface is linear, the Phase2 joint interface properties for the structural interface are given a Mohr-Coulomb slip criterion with cohesion and friction angle equal to the adhesion and friction angle defined for the Slide geotextile. If the Slide Shear Strength Model for the geotextile-soil interface is hyperbolic, the Phase2 joint interface properties for the structural interface are given a Geosynthetic Hyperbolic slip criterion with adhesion and friction angle equal to the adhesion and friction angle defined for the Slide geotextile. Interface normal and shear stiffnesses between the geotextile and the soil are also required. Default values of Kn=100000KPa/m and Ks=10000KPa/m are used. These are based on a number of published values and can be changed in the Joint Properties dialog. Material dependant geotextile properties are not read from the Slide file but can be manually defined in Phase2. Slide anchorage methods are supported through the different finite-element mesh end conditions of the structural interface. See the online help for more information on these parameters. Strip coverage is not supported for values other than 100%. You will have to factor the interface and tensile strength properties to account for strip coverage. Slide Grouted Tiebacks and Soil Nails are both converted to Phase2 tieback bolts. The only difference between the two is the grouted length. Soil Nails have 100% grouted length. The Phase2 tieback peak tensile capacity is taken as the minimum of the Slide plate capacity and tensile capacity. The residual capacity is set to zero. The bolt spacing is read from the support spacing in the Slide file. In the case of tiebacks, the grouted length is properly read. For both Slide soil nails and grouted tiebacks, the bond strength is properly read.
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Slide Grouted Tiebacks with friction are not properly read into Phase2. They are read as Phase2 tieback bolts but no bond capacity is defined. The user must either define an equivalent bond capacity to the frictional characteristics, thus accounting for the depth of the anchor, or use structural interface elements instead. In the case of structural interface elements, the debonded length of the bolt should be given different material properties than the bonded length. In particular, the debonded length should be given joint stiffness properties (normal and shear) equal to zero. You will require a vertex on the structural interface to separate the bonded from the debonded length. Micro-piles are not supported in Phase2. Piles should be modeled using structural interfaces or liner elements. User-defined support properties in Slide are not supported in Phase2.
Mesh Generation
The complete finite-element mesh is automatically created during the import of the Slide file. No user intervention is required. The mesh, by default, will contain approximately 3000 uniformly distributed 6 noded triangular elements.
Boundary Conditions
The import facility automatically determines the top, bottom and sides of the external boundary used in the Slide model. The boundary conditions applied to these surfaces are: 1) the top boundary (ground surface) is free to move in the x and y directions, 2) the sides are fixed in the x and y directions (pinned), 3) the bottom surface is fixed in the x and y directions (pinned). The following image shows a typical mesh and boundary conditions after import of a Slide model.
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Ponded Water
In Phase2, ponded water is replaced by an equivalent distributed load (pressure) normal to the submerged portion of the external boundary. The distributed load, which varies according to the submerged topology, is defined using a series of Ponded Water loads which are oriented normal to the external boundary. When importing a Slide file with ponded water, Phase2 will automatically replace the ponded water by these ponded water distributed loads.
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Slide file imported into Phase2 NOTE: This Slide file already included finite element groundwater seepage analysis, therefore the existing groundwater mesh from Slide was imported directly into Phase2. The groundwater boundary conditions in Slide defined ponded water at the toe of the slope. As you can see in the above figure, this has been converted into an equivalent distributed load (blue arrows) in Phase2. As an optional exercise, you can compare the material properties of this model in both Slide and Phase2. Open this file in Slide (assuming you have the Slide program). Compare the Material (strength and hydraulic) properties in Slide and Phase2. You will find that the properties are the same. Note that the filename (in Phase2) now has a .FEZ filename extension. This is the filename extension used for Phase2 files.
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Results of SSR analysis for imported Slide file. Notice the following:
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1. By default, after an SSR slope stability analysis has been performed in Phase2, the Maximum Shear Strain contours will be displayed. The Maximum Shear Strain contours highlight the failure of the slope at the critical Strength Reduction Factor. 2. The critical SRF represents the Strength Reduction Factor at which the slope becomes unstable (i.e. the stress analysis approaches non-convergence). 3. You will notice that the Stage tabs at the bottom of the screen indicate SRF: (value). Each tab corresponds to ONE iteration of the SSR analysis, using the indicated value of Strength Reduction Factor. 4. By default, the tab with the critical Strength Reduction Factor will be displayed initially. In this case, the critical SRF = 1.49. (Note: this compares with a minimum safety factor slip circle in Slide = 1.52, which is in good agreement). Select the tabs with higher SRF values to view the formation of the slip zone as the shear strength is reduced. 5. By default after an SSR analysis in Phase2, only the SSR results are displayed. If you wish to view the regular Phase2 analysis results (i.e. the results of the stress analysis without applying the Strength Reduction Factor), you must select DataStage Settings (in Phase2 Interpret), and set the Reference Stage = 0 (Not Used). You will then see the results for all stages before the SSR analysis (in this case only the Stage 1 tab) followed by the SSR tabs.
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This graph summarizes the essential results of the SSR analysis. The Strength Reduction Factor is plotted against the Maximum Displacement (at any point in the model). The critical Strength Reduction Factor corresponds to the point at which the Maximum Displacement shows a sudden increase (i.e. the model becomes unstable).
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4. Now, in the Phase2 Interpret program, go to the Edit menu and select Paste from Slide Interpret. 5. You will see the slip circle/surface from Slide Interpret, imported into Phase2 Interpret. NOTE: the surface is imported as a Polyline Drawing Tool entity. If you carry out these steps for the current example model, you will see the following:
Notice the critical slip circle (from Slide) corresponds approximately to the zone of Maximum Shear Strain contours in Phase2. A similar procedure can be used to import a drawing polyline from the Phase2 Interpret program, into the Slide Model program. In the Slide Model program, it can be imported as an actual slip surface, which allows you to run a Slide analysis on a surface imported from Phase2. That concludes this tutorial, for more examples of the Shear Strength Reduction method, see the Phase2 Slope Stability Verification manual, and the accompanying example files, which are installed with the Phase2 program.
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