Pub. 17 2023 Issue 1

Screening Methods in Liquefaction Analyses By TAYLOR HALL, Owner and Principal, Moab Geotechnical Group The 2020 Magna Earthquake was a friendly reminder of the seismic setting that we live in. Earthquakes can cause damage in various ways, from the ground shaking triggered by a fault rupture to the ground movement initiated by the buildup of pore pressures in subsurface soils. Whatever the movement, it’s important for structural and geotechnical engineers to work together to properly evaluate the potential seismic hazards that each site may pose. That includes evaluating the potential of liquefaction and lateral spread in subsurface soils. As we know, liquefaction is the phenomenon that occurs in loose sands, silts and clays, but does it occur in all silts and are clays susceptible to it? This article discusses the current state of screening of liquefaction susceptibility of fine-grained soils. The Chinese Criteria was one of the first screening methods to evaluate soils’ liquefaction potential. The Chinese Criteria was a Chinese building code enforced design procedure that required soil to meet the following conditions before it could be considered susceptible to liquefaction. • The clay content (particles smaller than #200 sieve) is <15% by weight • The liquid limit is 35% • The natural moisture content is >0.9 times the liquid limit Since the Chinese Criteria was adopted, several large earthquake events (Kocaeli in 1999, Chi-Chi in 1999, Adaparazi in 1999 and Christchurch in 2011) have resulted in liquefaction and seismic induced movement. Our community of engineers dispatched researchers to observe and record the movement. This data has been added to the growing database of sites that experienced ground movement due to liquefaction. Just as important, the data noted sites where liquefaction was expected but did not occur. After the community reviewed the new data, it became apparent that the Chinese Criteria was not accurately predicting which sites did and did not liquefy. It became necessary to update it, particularly regarding fine-grained soils. In 2001, Youd prepared a monumental paper that discussed several screening methodologies that had used the new data to refine and replace the Chinese Criteria. Since that paper, several other methodologies have been prepared using new and refined data. One of the more often referenced methodologies was outlined in Bray and Sancio’s 2006 paper on the Assessment of Liquefaction Susceptibility of Fine-Grained Soils (Bray and Sancio, 2006). The authors used case history data from measured historical earthquake events to establish screening criteria for evaluating whether soils are susceptible to liquefaction. They concluded that soils with a water-content-to-liquid-limit ratio of 85% or greater and a plasticity index less than 12 were susceptible to liquefaction. The paper found soils to be moderately susceptible to liquefaction when their plasticity index ranged between 12 and 18 and the water content to liquid limit ratio was 80% or greater. Where one could imagine soils with a plasticity index greater than 18 are no longer liquefiable, the authors strategically state that “structures founded on these soils, and for that matter, any soils, may undergo significant deformation if cyclic loads approach or exceed the dynamic strength of the soil.” (Bray and Sancio, 2006) Although not as widely accepted as the findings from the NCEER workshop, the Soil Liquefaction During Earthquakes monograph (Idriss and Boulanger, 2008) offers additional screening criteria for use in liquefaction analyses. The 46

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