A computationally efficient SPH framework for unsaturated soils and its application to predicting the entire rainfall-induced slope failure process
The first and fully validated smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) model is presented to tackle coupled flow–deformation problems in unsaturated porous media that undergo large deformation and post-failure behaviour. Unlike the commonly adopted double-layer SPH framework for saturated soils, this paper presents a three-phase single-layer SPH model capable of predicting anisotropic seepage flows through porous media and their complete time-dependent transition from unsaturated to saturated states, as well as their influence on the mechanical behaviour of the porous media and vice versa. The mathematical framework is developed based on Biot's mixture theory and discretised using the authors’ recently developed novel SPH approximation scheme for the second derivatives of a field quantity. The soil is modelled using a suction-dependent elastoplastic constitutive model, expressed in terms of effective stress and suction. In addition, an adaptive two-timescale scheme is proposed for the first time to address existing challenges in solving coupled-flow large-deformation problems that involve a significant difference in the timescale required for the solid and fluid phases. The capability of the proposed SPH model was demonstrated through fundamental consolidation tests and a large-scale rainfall-induced slope failure experiment. Very good agreements with theoretical solutions and experimental results are achieved, suggesting that the proposed SPH model can be readily extended to solve a wide range of large-scale geotechnical applications involving coupled unsaturated seepage–deformation problems.
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