NICHOLAS SITARo
CEE 281 ENGINEERING GEOLOGY - Tu, Th
o
F
o
CEE
70 ENGINEERING GEOLOGY - Tu, Th 12:30-
o
Tu, W
B.A.Sc.
Geological Engineering,
M.S.
Geology - Hydrogeology,
Ph.D.
Civil Engineering - Geotechnical,
Registered
Geological Engineer in
On the undergraduate level, Professor Sitar has taught
introductory courses in Engineering Geology, Soil Mechanics and Foundation
Engineering, and Groundwater and Seepage. On the graduate level he is currently
teaching Engineering Geology and Environmental Geotechnics.
His current research interests include seismic slope stability, seismic
response of reinforced soil structures, analysis of seismically induced earth
pressures on retaining structures, behavior of discontinuous rock masses, and
the application of GIS to seismic slope stability. In Environmental Geotechnics his research interests are in groundwater
remediation and in probabilistic risk assessment applied to groundwater flow
and contaminant transport. The emphasis is on developing methodologies for
practical field applications.
Application of Wireless Sensor
Technology to Environmental Monitoring
Ubiquitous wireless sensor
networks have numerous potential applications in many areas. The main objective of this research is to
develop affordable, reliable wireless instrumentation for a variety of
applications such as wild fire monitoring, landslide and rock fall monitoring,
and monitoring on underground space.
It is well recognized that the natural heterogeneity
of the subsurface environment introduces a significant level of uncertainty in
making predictions of the expected contaminant pathways and concentration
levels. The approach taken in this work is to use reliability methods developed
primarily in structural engineering and to apply them to slope stability
analyses in soil and rock. These techniques appear to offer considerable
computational advantage in the analysis of events with a very low probability
of occurrence. The current emphasis is on development of new applications.
Evaluation of Seismically Induced
Earth Pressures on Retaining Structures – It is generally accepted that
retaining structures are subject to increased loads due to seismic
loading. However, observations in a
number of recent earthquakes suggest that well designed retaining structures
perform quite well even if they are not particularly designed for seismic
loading. The purpose of this current
research is to perform seismic centrifuge studies of seismically induced earth
pressure in order to calibrate analytical techniques used in design.
Seismic Response of
Improved Ground Ground improvement using different techniques is
extensively used to mitigate the seismically induced liquefaction hazard. In this project, dynamic centrifuge tests are
being used to evaluate the influence of the geometry of the improved zone on
the expected performance of the improved ground.
The deformations of large rock masses are governed
among other factors by the kinematics of the interaction between individual
blocks. The Discontinuous Deformation Analysis (DDA) method is being used to
develop a better understanding of this mechanism of deformation. A new PC-based
version of the DDA code for Windows 95 and NT has been developed as a part of
this effort.
·
Ashford, S.A. and Sitar, N., “Simplified
Method for Evaluating Seismic Stability of Steep Slopes,” J. of Geotech.
And Geoenv. Engineering, ASCE, Feb. 2002, V128, N2,
119-128.
·
Mok, C.M., Sitar, N., and Der Kiureghian, A, "Improving
Accuracy of First-order Reliability Estimate by Importance Sampling
Simulations", Fourth International Conference on Calibration and
Reliability in Groundwater Modelling-a few steps
closer to reality, Prague, Czech Republic, 17-20 June, 2002, IAHS, Modelcare 2002.
·
E.A. Hausler, N. Sitar, O. Matsuo and M. Okamura, “Remediation Zone Geometry Under Shallow
Foundations: A Comparison of Model Tests on Two Dynamic Centrifuges,”
Proceedings, International Conference on Physical Modelling
in Geotechnics, St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada,
July 10-12, 2002, 557-562.
·
Doolin, D.M. and Sitar, N., “Displacement Accuracy of the DDA Method Applied to a Sliding Block,”
J. of
·
Kim, J. and Sitar, N., “Importance of Spatial and Temporal
Variability in the Analysis of Seismically-Induced Slope Deformation,”
Proceedings, ICASP 9,
·
Jimenez-Rodriguez, R. and Sitar, N., “Probabilistic Analysis of
Unstable Wedges in Excavations,” Proceedings, ICASP 9,
·
Harp, E.L., Jibson R.W., Kayen
R.E., Keefer D.K., Sherrod B.L., Carver G.A., Collins B.D., Moss R.E.S., Sitar
N., “Landslides and Liquefaction triggered by the M7.9 Denali Fault
Earthquake fo 3 November 2002”, GSA Today,
August, 2003 pp.4-10.
·
Khazai, B. and Sitar, N., “Evaluation of Factors Controlling Earthquake-Induced Landslides Caused
by Chi-Chi Earthquake and Comparison with the Northridge and Loma Prieta Events,”
Engineering Geology, Volume 71, Issues 1-2, January 2004, Pages 79-95.
·
Kim, J. and
Sitar, N., “Direct Estimation of Yield
Acceleration in Seismic Slope Stability Analyses”, J. of Geotech. and Geoenv. Engineering, ASCE, Jan.
2004, 111-115.
·
Doolin, D.M. and Sitar, N., “Time Integration in Discontinuous Deformation Analysis,” J. of
·
Kayen, R., Thompson E., Minasian
D., Collins B., Moss E.R.S., Sitar, N., Carver, G. “Geotechnical Observations of the November 3, 2002 M7.9 Denali Fault
Earthquake,” Proceedings, Fifth International Conf. on Case Histories in
Geotechnical Engineering, New York, NY, April 13-17, 2004.
·
Collins, B.D. and
Sitar, N., “Application of High
Resolution 3D Laser Scanning to Slope Stability Studies,” Proc. 39th
Annual Symp. On
·
Jimenez-Rodriguez,
R. and Sitar N., “Identification of Rock
Conditions for Tunnel Support Using a Statistical Classification Approach,”
Proc. 39th Annual Symp. On
·
Wang, G. and
Sitar, N., “Numerical Analysis of Piles
in Elasto-Plastic Soils Under Axial Loading,”
Proc. 17th
·
Kayen, R., Thompson, E., Minasian,
D., Moss, R.E.S., Collins, B.D., Sitar, N., Dreger,
D., and Carver, C., “Geotechnical Reconnaissance
of the 2002 Denali Fault, Alaska, Earthquake,” Earthquake Spectra, EERI,
Vol. 20, No. 3, August 2004, pp. 639-667.
·
Collins, B.D., and Sitar, N., "Monitoring
of Coastal Bluff Stability Using High Resolution 3D Laser Scanning" in
Site Characterization and Modeling, Geotechnical Special Publication No. 138,
ASCE, GeoInstitute, January, 2005.
·
Doolin, D.M., and Sitar, N. "Wireless
Sensors for Wildfire Monitoring," Smart
Structures and Materials 2005: Sensors and Smart Structures Technologies for
Civil, Mechanical, and Aerospace Systems, M. Tomizuka
ed., Proceedings of SPIE, Vol. 5765, San Diego, CA, March 2005.
·
Tsesarsky, M., Hatzor, Y., and Sitar,
N., "Dynamic displacement of a block
on an inclined plane: Analytical, experimental and DDA results", Rock
Mechanics and Rock Engineering, v 38, n 2, April, 2005, p 153-167
·
Sitar, N., MacLaughlin, M.M., and Doolin, D.M., “Influence
of Kinematics on Landslide Mobility and Failure Mode”, Journal of
Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering, Vol.
131, No. 6, June, 2005.
·
Collins, B.D., and Sitar, N., "Failure
Mode Identification and Hazard Quantification for Coastal Bluff
Landslides," Proceedings 2005 International Conference on Landslide
Risk Management, Editors O. Hungr and R. Fell R.
Couture, and
·
Jiménez-Rodríguez R. and Sitar N., "Probabilistic rock wedge stability
analysis using system reliability methods", Paper J0880, CD
Proceedings 2005 International Conference on Landslide Risk Management, Editors
O. Hungr and R. Fell, R. Couture, and E. Eberhardt, Vancouver, BC, Canada, June 2005.
·
Jimenez-Rodriguez R. and Sitar, N. "Probabilistic
identification of removable wedges in rock slopes: Influence of stochastic
model parameters”, Proceedings, Eurorock 2005 -
Impact of Human Activity on Geological Environment, P. Konecny
ed., A.A. Balkema, Netherlands, May 2005.
·
Jimenez-Rodriguez R. and Sitar, N. "Maximum
likelihood inference of discontinuity trace lengths based on observations at
rock outcrops”, GeoEngineering Report No.
UCB/GE-2005/01.
·
Jimenez-Rodriguez R. and Sitar, N. "Probabilistic
identification of removable wedges in rock slopes: Influence of stochastic
model parameters,” GeoEngineering Report No.
UCB/GE-2005/02, May 2005, 51 p.
·
Jimenez-Rodriquez R., Sitar, N., and Bartlett, P. "Maximum likelihood estimation of trace length distribution
parameters using the EM algorithm", in Prediction, Analysis and Design
in Geomechanical Applications: Proceedings of the
Eleventh International Conference on Computer Methods and Advances in Geomechanics (IACMAG-2005), G. Barla
and M. Barla, eds., Torino,
Italy, 19-24 June, 2005, pp. 619-626.
·
Jiménez-Rodríguez, R., Sitar, N., and Chacón,
J. “Caracterización
de discontinuidades en macizos
rocosos mediante modelos gráficos probabilísticos” [Characterization of discontinuities in
rock masses by means of probabilistic graphical models], Métodos Numéricos en Ingeniería 2005, J.L. Pérez Aparicio, A. Rodríguez Ferrán, J.A.C. Martins, R. Gallego
and J. César de Sá editors,
SEMNI, Sociedad Española de
Métodos Numéricos en Ingeniería, publisher, Extended abstract in Proceedings;
full paper on CD-Rom, 2005.
·
Wang G, Liu X.H., Li S.F., Sitar, N., “Smart element method II. An element based on the finite Eshelby tensor,” Int. J. for Numerical Methods in
Engineering, 64 (10): 1303-1333, Nov. 2005.
·
Nova-Roessig, L. and Sitar, N., “Centrifuge
Model Studies of the Seismic Response of Reinforced Soil Slopes” Journal
of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering, Vol.
132, No. 3,
·
Jimenez-Rodriguez, R., Sitar, N.; and Chacon,
J., “System reliability approach to rock
slope stability”, International
Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences, v 43, n 6, September,
2006, p 847-859.
·
Jimenez-Rodriguez, R. and Sitar, N., “Inference of discontinuity trace length
distributions using statistical graphical models”, International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences, v
43, n 6, September, 2006, p 877-893.
·
Jimenez-Rodriguez, R. and Sitar, N., “A spectral method for clustering of rock
discontinuity sets”, International
Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences, v 43, n 7, October, 2006,
p 1052-1061.
Geotechnical Group / Department of Civil Engineering / University of California at Berkeley.