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    Pore-water pressure in levee stability: modelling choices and safety notes for engineers

    February 24, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Pore-water pressure in levee stability: modelling choices and safety notes for engineers

    First reported on Geoengineer.org – News

    30 Second Briefing

    A levee stability example models a flood event over a confined aquifer, comparing pore-water pressure definitions under different PLAXIS licensing options (2D, LE, and LE Advanced). The case contrasts simple hydrostatic assumptions with transient seepage and confined aquifer responses, including delayed pressure dissipation and uplift at the levee toe. Results show how choice of pore-pressure model and licence level materially changes calculated factors of safety and potential slip surfaces, directly affecting design decisions for flood defence embankments on artesian foundations.

    Technical Brief

    • PLAXIS LE Advanced users can import transient pore-pressure grids from PLAXIS 2D for limit equilibrium.
    • Basic PLAXIS LE users instead define pore-water pressures via piezometric lines and user-specified artesian heads.
    • Confined aquifer behaviour is represented using a separate piezometric surface below the phreatic line in the fill.
    • The workflow contrasts total head assignment at the aquifer roof versus specifying uplift pressures at the levee base.
    • Different pore-pressure definitions are run on identical slip surface search settings to isolate hydraulic effects.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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