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<p>Earthquakes induced liquefaction is one of the most significant causes of damage to structures during an earthquake. Ground improvement is currently considered to be the most appropriate mitigation tecnique to prevent soil liquefaction. This work is aimed to compare different liquefaction mitigation techniques for protection of small-to-medium sized ‘critical’ infrastructures and low-rise buildings. The effectiveness of some techniques (densification, addition of fine contents, induced partial saturation and drainage systems) was verified via experimental evidences coming from laboratory testing, physical modelling and liquefaction field prototype tests. Starting from the calibration of advanced soil constitutive models, numerical modelling activities were extended to the back-analysis of centrifuge tests and field prototype tests, up to a parametric study with different geometrical layouts.</p>
laboratory tests,, soil liquefaction; mitigation techniques, laboratory tests, numerical modelling, centrifuge tests, numerical modelling, numerical modelling,, laboratory tests, soil liquefaction;, centrifuge tests., soil liquefaction, mitigation techniques,, mitigation techniques, centrifuge tests
laboratory tests,, soil liquefaction; mitigation techniques, laboratory tests, numerical modelling, centrifuge tests, numerical modelling, numerical modelling,, laboratory tests, soil liquefaction;, centrifuge tests., soil liquefaction, mitigation techniques,, mitigation techniques, centrifuge tests
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