Daniel B. Chu
University of California, Los Angeles
5 Papers
9 Citations
Daniel B. Chu is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Geology & Bearing capacity. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Documentation of soil conditions at liquefaction and non-liquefaction sites from 1999 Chi-Chi (Taiwan) earthquake
Daniel B. Chu,Jonathan P. Stewart,Shannon Lee,Jiin-Song Tsai,Ping-Sien Lin,Bin-Lin Chu,Raymond B. Seed,Sung-Chi Hsu,M. S. Yu,Mark C.H. Wang +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors document results from several large site investigation programs conducted in Nantou, Wufeng and Yuanlin, Taiwan, including cone penetration testing (some with pore pressure and shear wave velocity measurements) and rotary wash borings with standard penetration testing.
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Liquefaction-induced lateral spreading in near-fault regions during the 1999 Chi-Chi, Taiwan earthquake
TL;DR: In this article, the authors document and analyze incidents of liquefaction-induced lateral ground deformation at five sites located in the near-fault region of the 1999 Chi-Chi Taiwan earthquake.
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Cyclic softening of low plasticity clay and its effect on seismic foundation performance
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the results of field investigations and analyses of a small region within Wufeng along an E-W trending line 350 m long, which experienced peak accelerations of about 0.7 g during the 1999 Chi-Chi earthquake.
Cyclic softening of low plasticity clay and its effect on seismic foundation performance - eScholarship
Daniel B. Chu,Jonathan P Stewart,Ross W. Boulanger,Ping-Sien Lin +3 more
- 01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the results of field investigations and analyses of a small region within Wufeng along an E-W trending line 350 m long, which experienced peak accelerations of about 0.7 g during the 1999 Chi-Chi earthquake.
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Liquefaction and Non-Liquefaction from 1999 Chi-Chi, Taiwan, Earthquake
Jonathan P. Stewart,Daniel B. Chu,Shannon Lee,Jiin-Song Tsai,Ping-Sien Lin,Bin-Lin Chu,Robb E.S. Moss,Raymond B. Seed,Sung-Chi Hsu,M. S. Yu,Mark C.H. Wang +10 more
- 20 Nov 2003
TL;DR: In this article, the authors synthesize results from several large site investigation programs conducted in Nantou and Wufeng, Taiwan, and compare the data to susceptibility and triggering models, and find components of the well-known Chinese criteria associated with liquid limit and water content/LL to be reasonably well validated by the Taiwan data, but clay fraction criteria and CPT-based criteria to not be effective.
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