Investigation on Dewatering Scheme Optimization, Water Levels, and Support Layout Influences for Steel Sheet Pile Cofferdams
Abstrak
Based on the steel sheet pile cofferdam project for the main bridge piers of a cross-sea bridge, finite element numerical simulations were conducted to analyze the influence of construction sequences in marine environments, as well as the effects of initial water levels and support positions under various construction conditions on the stress and deformation behavior of steel sheet piles. Using a staged construction simulation with a Mohr–Coulomb soil model and stepwise activation of loads/excavation, this study delivers practically relevant trends: staged dewatering halves the sheet pile head displacement (top lateral movement <0.08 m vs. ~0.16 m in the original scheme) and mobilizes the support system earlier, while slightly increasing peak bending demand (~1800 kN·m) at the bracing elevation; the interaction between water head and brace elevation is explored through fitted response curves and summarized in figures/tables, and soil/structural properties are tabulated for reproducibility. The results indicate that a well-designed dewatering process, along with the coordination between water levels and internal support positions, plays a critical role in controlling deformation. The findings offer valuable references for the design and construction of sheet pile cofferdams in marine engineering under varying construction methods and water level conditions.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (6)
Meng Xiao
Da-Shu Guan
Wen-Feng Zhang
Wei Chen
Xing-Ke Lin
Ming-Yang Zeng
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.3390/buildings15193526
- Akses
- Open Access ✓