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  DELAYED FAILURE IN SOFT CLAY FOUNDATIONS  
 TOSHIHIRO NODA, G. S K.FERNANDO and AKIRA ASAOKA  
 ABSTRACT Even in normally consolidated or lightly 
 overconsolidated clay foundations failures can occur some days/weeks 
 after the load application is completed. Such an event can sometimes be 
 attributed to creep-like failure. In this paper, the time dependent 
 failure of a homogeneous normally consolidated soft clay foundation has 
 been investigated using soil-water coupled elasto-plastic finite 
 deformation analysis. The inviscid subloading surface Cam-clay model, 
 which can express smooth transition from overconsolidated states to 
 normally consolidated states during reloading, was used for the soil. 
 With drained boundaries a clay foundation can experience failure, 
 instead of consolidation, with the elapse of time after the end of load 
 application. The foundation stays apparently stable for some time until 
 it experiences a sudden failure. The occurrence of such a delayed 
 failure in an elasto-plastic soil foundation is triggered off by the 
 predominant pore water migration over the drainage from the soil mass 
 due to softening that results in the increase of excess pore water 
 pressure under this constant load. With time, the region in the 
 foundation under higher excess pore pressure expands outward 
 progressively from the centerline until failure. The pore pressure 
 increase under constant load is similar to observed cases that 
 registered increase in piezometric heads. When the magnitude of load at 
 the end of construction is comparatively low, i.e. comparatively below 
 the stationary load, only the consolidation process proceeds.  
 Key words: bearing capacity, consolidation, creep, delayed 
 failure, finite deformation, finite element method (IGC: 
 E2)  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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