Jiwootech Docs
Geometry

Tension Cracks

Add tension cracks, optionally water-filled, at the slope crest.

Add tension cracks, optionally water-filled, at the slope crest.

A tension crack is a closed polygon, typically near the crest, that truncates the slip surface. Soil cannot sustain tension, so where a trial surface would pass through the crack the surface is cut and replaced by a vertical face. If the crack holds water, the resulting hydrostatic thrust is applied to that face, reducing the factor of safety.

Drawing a tension crack

  1. Click Add Tension Crack in the Geometry panel.
  2. Place the polygon vertices on the canvas, or type coordinates in the command input.
  3. Click Done Tension Crack.

A tension crack requires at least 3 points. Use Clear Tension Cracks to remove all cracks.

Water-fill modes

Set how the crack is filled with water from the properties pane. The available modes are:

ModeDescription
DryNo water in the crack; no hydrostatic thrust.
Fully SaturatedThe crack is full to the top.
Partially SaturatedFilled to a user-set percentage of depth (0–100%).
Follow Water TableWater level in the crack tracks the model water table.
FEA Pore PressureCrack water pressure comes from the FEA pore-pressure field.

The default mode is Dry. For Partially Saturated, the fill percentage defaults to 50%.

FEA Pore Pressure is experimental

The FEA Pore Pressure mode reads from the experimental finite-element seepage solver. Treat results that depend on it as experimental.

How a tension crack clips the slip surface

Where a trial surface intersects the crack, the surface is truncated and a vertical face is inserted from the crack to the surface. Which side of the crack is removed depends on the failure direction of the analysis: for a right-to-left failure the right portion is cut off, and for a left-to-right failure the left portion is cut off. This keeps the retained sliding mass on the correct side of the crack.

On this page