Examination of the reduction in natural frequency of laterally loaded piles due to strain-dependence of soil shear modulus
Citation:
Luke Prendergast and David Igoe, Examination of the reduction in natural frequency of laterally loaded piles due to strain-dependence of soil shear modulus, Ocean Engineering, 258, Article 111614, 2022Download Item:
1-s2.0-S0029801822009787-main.pdf (PDF) 6.705Mb
Abstract:
Society’s transition to low-carbon energy sources has resulted in significant expansion in offshore wind tech-
nology. Most offshore wind turbines (OWTs) are founded on large-diameter steel tubular piles driven into the
seabed, termed monopiles. OWTs are subjected to large numbers of dynamic and cyclic environmental loads
during their lifetime. To avoid fatigue or resonance issues, accurate characterisation of soil-structure interaction
under operating and extreme conditions is paramount. There is a need to further improve understanding of the
dynamic lateral response of piles after large lateral load cycling (storm events). This paper presents the results of
lateral load field tests on piles with two different slenderness ratios, where the natural frequency was measured
after a series of applied lateral load-unload events. 1D numerical models of the piles were developed and several
operating parameters were varied to identify the parameters of importance in the nonlinear soil-pile interaction.
Approaches to estimate the operating soil shear modulus both in-situ and post load-unload were trialled, and five
subgrade reaction models were used to couple soil and pile properties, to ascertain the performance at predicting
the measured frequencies from the experiments. Results suggest that predicted frequencies are highly sensitive to
choice of model and degradation method used.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/igoed
Author: Igoe, David
Type of material:
Journal ArticleSeries/Report no:
Ocean Engineering;258;
Article 111614;
Availability:
Full text availableKeywords:
Soil-structure interaction, Dynamics, Offshore wind, Foundations, Frequency, StructuresSubject (TCD):
Smart & Sustainable PlanetDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oceaneng.2022.111614Licences: