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Published in

American Society of Civil Engineers, Journal of Computing in Civil Engineering, 5(29), 2015

DOI: 10.1061/(asce)cp.1943-5487.0000373

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Determination of critical slip surfaces using mutative scale chaos optimization

Journal article published in 2013 by Cong Hu, Rafael Jimenez Rodriguez ORCID, Shu-Cai Li, Li-Ping Li
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Limit equilibrium is a common method used to analyze the stability of a slope, and minimization of the factor of safety or identification of critical slip surfaces is a classical geotechnical problem in the context of limit equilibrium methods for slope stability analyses. A mutative scale chaos optimization algorithm is employed in this study to locate the noncircular critical slip surface with Spencer’s method being employed to compute the factor of safety. Four examples from the literature—one homogeneous slope and three layered slopes—are employed to identify the efficiency and accuracy of this approach. Results indicate that the algorithm is flexible and that although it does not generally provide the minimum FS, it provides results that are close to the minimum, an improvement over other solutions proposed in the literature and with small relative errors with respect to other minimum factor of safety (FS) values reported in the literature.