dc.description.abstract |
Indo-Gangetic Alluvial Plains (IGP) is highly fertile and populated sedimentary foreland
basins of the world. At places the sediments reach a thickness of 4-5 km even. Due to Himalayan
orogeny, a number of deep-seated faults transverse up to Siwaliks and divide IGP into several
basins. Besides, faults parallel to extension of Himalaya also affect the structure of these basins.
The vast region of IGP is prone to earthquake hazard. Even though earthquakes do not kill
humans but the buildings do. Added to this threat, major earthquakes (Mw≥7.5) induce soil
liquefaction in sedimentary tracts and as a result the near surface soil behaves like a fluid and it
can’t support any civil structures. So, a strong scientific approach based soil liquefaction hazard
assessment of major metropolitan cities, industrial sites, vital and strategic installation sites and
heavily populated regions of IGP and rest part of India is needed. Such scientific efforts need
non-invasive and cost-effective methods. Accordingly, our present study involving Electrical
Resistivity Tomography (ERT) with minimal invasive SPT tests seem to be quite attractive with
predictive results either comparable or better than the existing practices. The present thesis is
aimed at this objective and it uses electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) for this purpose with
various transforms leading to assessing the vulnerability of a site for soil liquefaction.
The theory involves use of transformations (regression equations) for conversion of
resistivity to either Young’s modulus or shear wave velocity, Vs and another regression equation
converts Vs to synthetic SPT-N (blows per 0.30m) values, which characterize the mechanical
strength of near surface soils. Irrespective of nature of SPT-N (synthetic or results of SPT site
investigation measurements), the next set of transforms use a standard geotechnical practice
supported by an appropriate theory result in Factor of Safety (FOS) computations. The
conversion of SPT-N data into FOS sections involves standard cyclic stress and cyclic resistance
ratio computations.
Our methodology is illustrated with the help of a field study involving three sites on our
IIT Roorkee Campus (three ERT and MASW profiles), India besides Noida (Seven ERT profiles
and 45 boreholes for SPT-N data acquisition) and Lucknow (three ERT profiles and 16
boreholes for SPT-N data acquisition) sites. The acquired data sets include ERT and MASW.
The achieved results including two different regression equations indicate that our ERT-based
ii
soil liquefaction study is much broader and seems to be more refined than the popular MASWbased
one .From practical considerations, if FOS ≥1.3, the site is free from soil liquefaction
hazard for major earthquakes, Mw ≥ 7.5 else the site is prone to soil liquefaction hazard.
On our campus, one of the reported sites (Earthquake Engineering) has liquefiable sands
at a shallow depth range of 5–15 m. Further, the similarity of our results to that of the MASWbased
method is corroborated by different Normalized Cross-correlation (NCC) plots. However,
the relative resolution aspects need a separate, thorough study. We have tried our methodology
with two different regression equations to ascertain our findings independently. The achieved
results are similar, thereby validating our approach.
Similarly, We have demonstrated our methodology successfully in other two study
regions(Lucknow site and Noida site) with both implicit and explicit use of SPT-N data. At
Lucknow site the estimated factor of safety lies in range (0-26) indicate liquefiable sands at a
shallow depth range of 18-24 m. We have tried our methodology with two different regression
equations to ascertain our findings independently with actual data sets. Accordingly, we
prepared depth-wise stacks for different regression equation based SPT-N and FOS for two sites
(Lucknow and Noida). For Lucknow site, the deviation of computed FOS logs using Srivastava
(2015) from FOS logs derived actual SPT-N is assessed in terms of mminimum and maximum
RMS errors, which lie in the range (13.40-33.57) and (5.74-9.84) respectively. Similarly, RMS
errors for Noida site are (4.85-14.06) and (0.468-12.3) respectively.
Thus, FOS log analysis confirm that ERT can be safely be used in place of point-based,
invasive and costly boreholes for SPT-N data acquisition. ERT-based method for soilliquefaction
hazard assessment is novel, and it is alternate and cost effective to the popular
MASW-based one. However, it is advisable to have few direct SPT-N measurements to check
the quality of FOS logs derived from ERT vis-à-vis direct SPT-N derived FOS logs. Based on
our detailed analyses in reported case studies, it seems that our ERT-based method offers better
spatial resolution in Vs, SPT, and ultimately FOS sections than MASW. As per the current study,
Lucknow site faces liquefaction hazard while two profiles at Noida site show liquefaction hazard
and IIT Roorkee site is free from soil liquefaction hazard for any future earthquakes of
magnitude Mw ≤ 7.5. However MASW studies at Saraswati temple site on IIT Roorkee campus
shows Liquefaction hazard |
en_US |