4.1. Influence of Joints between Wall Panels
As illustrated in
Figure 1, eight field monitoring points (FMPs) were installed to monitor the horizontal displacement of the diaphragm walls during the excavation process using inclinometers. FMP1 and FMP2 were positioned at the midpoint of the short side, to the west and east of the excavation, respectively, while FMP3 and FMP7 were positioned at the midpoint of the long side, to the south and north of the excavation, respectively. The remaining FMPs were positioned approximately 3/10 of the distance from the end of the long side. Two numerical models were developed, and one consider the joints between panels using the proposed method, while the other disregard the joints conventionally. We compare the horizontal displacements of the walls, obtained by field monitoring, and two numerical models at all the FMPs at the final stage of excavation, as shown in
Figure 9, and the magnitudes of the maximum wall displacements are summarised in
Table 6. Due to the three-dimensional spatial effect, the deformation of the shorter side of the pit is significantly smaller than that of the longer side, which is consistent with the research of Ou et al. [
7], Finno et al. [
46] and Li et al. [
47]. It should be noted that the calculated displacements at FMP3 and FMP8 are indistinguishable due to the symmetry on the x-axis of the numerical model, as depicted in
Figure 1; therefore, their calculated displacements are plotted on the same graph. The same applies to points FMP4 and FMP7, as well as to points FMP5 and FMP6.
As shown in
Figure 9a,b, for FMPs located on the short side, there is a significant difference between the calculated displacements obtained by the two methods, and a better agreement was found between the monitored and calculated displacements when considering the joints compared to disregarding them, indicating the effectiveness of the proposed method.
Table 6 demonstrates a significant reduction in the error of the calculated displacements when the joints are considered as proposed, and the average error of the calculated displacements considering the joints is only 8.76%, while it reaches an average error of 66.91% when the joints are disregarded as is conventional. This leads to the conclusion that the joints between the wall panels have a significant influence on the calculated displacements of the short side in the investigated excavation. The significant difference is primarily attributed to the influence in the excavation corner effect. When the joints are disregarded, the diaphragm wall in short side is regarded as an integrated whole, and the bending deformation of the short side in the horizontal direction is more constrained by the excavation corner. This results in a considerable horizontal stiffness of the diaphragm wall in the short side, which will result in a restriction of the deformation of the diaphragm wall. Consequently, the calculated displacement under earth pressure is minimal, resulting in significant error. However, when the joints are considered, their functions are similar to those of a hinge [
43], and the bending deformation of the short side in the horizontal direction is less constrained, resulting in relatively larger deformation and small errors.
As shown in
Figure 9c–e, the calculated displacements of the two numerical models are very similar for the FMPs located on the long side, and even approximately the same for FMP4 and FMP7. The monitored and calculated horizontal displacements show a reasonable agreement, which also demonstrates the validity of the numerical models.
Table 6 shows that the average error of the maximum calculated displacements is 13.88% and 16.03% for the numerical model when considering and disregarding joints, respectively. The observations suggest that placing joints between the wall panels has a slight influence on the calculated displacements of the long side in the investigated excavation, and the relative error of the maximum calculated displacements of the FMPs is slightly smaller when considering the joints compared to disregarding them. This is consistent with the results of Dong et al. [
25], who investigated a high-rise building excavation and concluded that the deformations at the midpoint of a stretch of wall are not sensitive to the anisotropy factor that reflects joint weakness. The difference between the calculated displacements obtained using the two methods is minimal, and it is primarily attributable to the fact that the FMPs of the long side are situated at a considerable distance from the excavation corner. As the distance from the corner increases, the bending deformation of the diaphragm wall in the horizontal direction is less constrained by the excavation corner. Even in the absence of the consideration of the joints, the horizontal stiffness of the diaphragm wall, which is regarded as an integrated whole, is already modest, and the deformation of the diaphragm wall is predominantly influenced by its vertical stiffness and by the structs stiffness. When the excavation is sufficiently long, the plane strain ratio (PSR), which refers to the ratio of the displacement of the wall under 3D simulation conditions to the displacement of the wall under the 2D plane strain condition, is close to 1.00 [
7,
47]. It is widely acknowledged that the horizontal stiffness of the diaphragm wall is not accounted for in the 2D numerical model. When the plane strain ratio (PSR) is equal to 1.00, it can be understood that the horizontal stiffness of the diaphragm wall in the 3D numerical model has no impact on the deformation of the excavation. As illustrated in
Figure 9e, the calculated displacements of FMP4 and FMP7 derived from the 3D model are found to be in close agreement with those obtained from the 2D model. This indicates that the plane strain ratio (PSR) is close to 1.00, and the horizontal stiffness of the diaphragm wall on the long side, which is influenced by the joints between wall panels, exerts a minimal influence on its deformation.
The maximum horizontal displacements of the walls obtained by monitoring and two numerical methods at each excavation stage are shown in
Figure 10, and a similar conclusion can be drawn. For the short side, the joints have a significant influence on the calculated displacements at each excavation stage, and the calculated displacements obtained by the proposed method are much closer to the monitored displacements compared to those obtained by the conventional method. For the long side, the calculated displacements obtained by the two methods at every stage are similar. This confirms that the influence of the joints on the calculated displacements at each excavation stage is relatively slight. However, the calculated displacements that take the joints into consideration as proposed are slightly closer to the monitored displacements at each stage.
The horizontal displacements of the walls, obtained by monitoring, and two numerical methods at the depth of the excavation bottom are compared, as shown in
Figure 11. The comparisons also indicate that the numerical model considering joints with the proposed method provides a better fit to the monitored data. The calculated displacements of the wall, determined by considering the joints at the depth of the excavation bottom, exhibit a broken-line deformation mode, the deformation of each individual panel displays an approximately linear pattern, and there is a significant turning point between panels. This indicates that the bending deformation of each individual panel in the horizontal direction is small, adjacent panels turn at the position of the joints, and this is consistent with the phenomenon where cracking and leakage often occur at the joints between panels during the excavation process (as shown in
Figure 12) [
48,
49,
50,
51,
52]. It should be noted, however, that the leakage is relatively slow and small, and therefore not included in the modelling. As shown in
Figure 11c, the gradient of the broken line is higher in the initial two joints at the head and tail ends of the long side, decreasing towards the center. As shown in
Figure 11a,b, the broken line within the initial joint of the short side exhibits an aberrant negative value, indicating that the walls installed at the end of the short side are deformed outwards by the excavation. This is likely to be caused by the rotation of the L-type wall installed at the corner of the excavation, which is induced by the overall deformation of the long side of the diaphragm walls and the earth pressure difference between the longer and shorter sections of the L-type wall, as shown in
Figure 13.
By contrast, the calculated displacements of the wall, disregarding the joints at the depth of excavation’s bottom, exhibit a smooth curve deformation mode, and the curve of the long side is close to the broken line aforementioned, while there is a clear difference between the curve and broken line of the short side, obtained by the two numerical models, respectively.
Figure 14 shows the contours of bending moments of the z-axis of the wall panel, located at the center of the long side of the excavation. This panel was selected for exhibition as its deformation was typically the largest. As shown in
Figure 14a, the bending moments of the z-axis around the steel structs obtained by the proposed method are extremely large, while they are very small in the remaining zone, which coincides with the actual reinforcement of the diaphragm walls. In practical applications, horizontal reinforcement is typically concentrated near the steel structures to sustain the strut forces, with sparse reinforcement located elsewhere that only meets the construction demand [
53]. Additionally, the bending moments of the z-axis of the joints are close to zero, which coincides with the function of the joints. In contrast, as shown in
Figure 14b, significant bending moments of the z-axis, obtained by the conventional method, are observed at the zone near the excavation bottom and in the zone around the steel structures. The calculated maximum bending moments of the z-axis of the wall panel and the joints reach almost 480 kN·m/m, indicating that substantial reinforcement in the horizontal direction of wall panels and joints would be required, which is not typically carried out in practice.
In summary, the proposed method for modelling the joints with anisotropic plate elements and elastic bar elements was validated via a comparison with the results of field monitoring. The calculated results when considering the joints are more consistent with the actual deformation and force behavior of diaphragm walls, and calculation disregarding the joints may cause the calculated displacements to be underestimated and the bending moments about a horizontal axis to be overestimated. Moreover, the joints between the wall panels have a significant influence on the calculated displacements for the short side, while it is relatively slight for the long side. In comparison to the method used by Zdravkovic et al. [
26] and Dong et al. [
25,
27,
28], the method proposed in this paper does not necessitate trial-and-error or back analysis based on actual monitored data in order to determine the reduced ratio, which renders it more convenient for application in practical engineering. However, the calculated displacements at the toe of diaphragm walls are typically greater than the monitored values, which is consistent with the results of Gu et al. [
37] and deserves further investigation.
4.2. Influence of the Excavation Length
The analyses in the previous section indicate that placing joints between panels has two distinct effects on the calculated displacements. These are specific to the long side and short side, respectively, in an identical numerical model. To investigate the influence of the excavation length on the relative difference between the calculated displacements obtained by the two methods, six additional operating cases were analysed, as shown in
Figure 15, and each case also included two numerical models: one model considered the joints as proposed, while the other considered it conventionally. The modelling procedures in the subsequent analysis were the same as those used in the previous analysis, except for the variation in excavation length.
Figure 16 presents the calculated displacements that occurred at the center of the excavation length for the six cases, while
Figure 17 illustrates the differences between the maximum calculated displacements obtained by the two methods used for the six cases. The relative differences in
Figure 17 and in the following sections are defined as shown in Equation (3).
where
is the maximum calculated displacements obtained by the proposed method, and
is the maximum calculated displacements obtained via the conventional method.
It was found that when the excavation length was 18.2 m (as shown in
Figure 16a), the maximum calculated displacement obtained via the conventional method was 15.36 mm, while the value obtained by the proposed method was 29.82 mm. There was a significant difference of almost 50% between the calculated displacements derived from the two methods (as shown in
Figure 17). The significant differences could be attributed primarily to the reduction in the horizontal stiffness of the diaphragm wall, caused by the use of joints in the proposed method, which had a significant influence on the deformation of the excavation with small plan dimensions. As the excavation length increased, the displacement curves obtained by the two methods gradually became closer (as shown in
Figure 16), and the difference between them decreased (as shown in
Figure 17). At a length of 48.2 m, the maximum calculated displacements obtained by the conventional method was 42.77 mm, while the value obtained by the proposed method was 42.87 mm, and the two curves almost coincided, as shown in
Figure 16f. The difference between these values was almost zero, as shown in
Figure 17. This was primarily due to the excavation length becoming longer, which in turn reduced the horizontal stiffness of the diaphragm wall. When the excavation was sufficiently long, the deformation of the diaphragm wall was predominantly influenced by its vertical stiffness and the structs stiffness, and the horizontal stiffness of the diaphragm wall had a negligible effect on its deformation. Consequently, the joints, which affected the horizontal stiffness, had a minimal influence on the calculated displacements, and the difference between the maximum calculated displacements obtained by two models was also small. The results indicate that the excavation length is negatively correlated with the relative difference between the calculated displacements obtained by the two methods. In other words, the shorter the excavation, the greater the influence of the joints have on the calculated displacement, and the more necessary it is to take them into account in the numerical models.
4.3. Influence of the Excavation Depth and Diaphragm Wall Thickness
A similar series of analyses was carried out to investigate the influence of the excavation depth and diaphragm wall thickness on the difference between the calculated displacements obtained by the two methods. In practical applications, diaphragm walls are commonly constructed with thicknesses of 0.6, 0.8, 1.0, and 1.2 m [
41,
53], and it should be noted that each diaphragm wall thickness is suitable for a particular range of excavation depths. For example, diaphragm walls with a thickness of 1.2 m are typically used to brace an excavation with a depth of 30.0 to 40.0 m. In this paper, three operating cases with different excavation depths were analysed for each diaphragm wall thickness, as illustrated in
Table 7, and each case also included two numerical models.
The excavation length for the twelve cases was set to be 30.0 m, and one strut level was added or removed for every 3.0 m change in excavation depth based on previous numerical models with excavation depths of 16.8 m. The differences between the maximum calculated displacements obtained by the two methods are depicted in
Figure 18 and
Figure 19 for different excavation depths and different diaphragm wall thicknesses, respectively, where
T and
H are diaphragm wall thickness and excavation depth, respectively.
As shown in
Figure 18, the relative error increases with the thickness of the diaphragm wall for the same excavation depth. It can also be observed from
Figure 19 that the differences increase with the diaphragm wall thickness for cases with the same excavation depth. To summarise, there is a positive correlation between the excavation depth and diaphragm wall thickness with the difference in calculated displacements obtained by the two methods. Therefore, we recommend considering the joints in diaphragm wall modelling for small-scale deep excavations, particularly for deeper excavations or thicker diaphragm walls.