Sinking during earthquakes: Critical acceleration criteria control drained soil liquefaction
C\'ecile Cl\'ement (IPGS), Renaud Toussaint (IPGS), Menka Stojanova, (IPGS, ILM), Einat Aharonov, C. Clement

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical model and experimental validation for soil liquefaction during earthquakes, highlighting the critical role of buoyancy and peak acceleration in causing granular soil to transition to a fluid-like state, leading to sinking of structures.
Contribution
It introduces a simple theoretical model linking buoyancy and acceleration to liquefaction, validated by experiments and simulations, providing new insights into soil stability during earthquakes.
Findings
Liquefaction depends mainly on peak ground acceleration.
The equilibrium sinking depth follows an exponential relaxation.
Presence of water significantly increases liquefaction susceptibility.
Abstract
This article focuses on liquefaction of saturated granular soils, triggered by earthquakes. Liquefaction is definedhere as the transition from a rigid state, in which the granular soil layer supports structures placed on its surface, toa fluidlike state, in which structures placed initially on the surface sink to their isostatic depth within the granularlayer.We suggest a simple theoretical model for soil liquefaction and show that buoyancy caused by the presence ofwater inside a granular medium has a dramatic influence on the stability of an intruder resting at the surface of themedium.We confirm this hypothesis by comparison with laboratory experiments and discrete-element numericalsimulations. The external excitation representing ground motion during earthquakes is simulated via horizontalsinusoidal oscillations of controlled frequency and amplitude. In the experiments, we use…
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