To main content

Post-peak behavior of concrete dams based on nonlinear finite element analyses

Abstract

Dam failures are catastrophic events and in order to improve safety, engineers must have good tools for analysis and an understanding of the failure process. Since there are few cases of real failures in concrete dams, which can work as validation, physical model tests are a good way of
improving numerical models and the understanding of the failure process. In this article, a physical model test of the buttress from a concrete Ambursen type dam is used as a benchmark for calibrating a FE-model. The dam failure is thereafter simulated using the concept of safety commonly used in the design codes. The advantages and drawbacks of performing load- and displacement-controlled simulations are compared. A new method for performing displacementcontrolled
simulations, using nonlinear springs to introduce the hydrostatic pressure and ice load is thereafter suggested and tested. The proposed method gives results which corresponds to the classical methods of analysis but has some advantages. Primarily, the new method is stable and does not suffer from convergence issues as was the case with the other methods. It is also simple to introduce in most commercial software compared to classical displacement-controlled simulations.
Read the publication

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Jonas Enzell
  • Adrian Ulfberg
  • Gabriel Sas
  • Richard Malm

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Narvik
  • Royal Institute of Technology
  • Luleå University of Technology

Year

2021

Published in

Engineering Failure Analysis

ISSN

1350-6307

Volume

130

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository