Bridge Course TS 2010 Fbook
Bridge Course TS 2010 Fbook
Bridge Course TS 2010 Fbook
Siva
Theivendrampillai
Sivakumar
Principal Engineer (Geotechnical)
Geotechnical Branch
Overview
Brief Discussion on:
• Foundation Type
• Foundation Design
2
TMR-Specifications
• Cast-in-Place Piles – MRTS63 and 63A
• Driven PSC Piles – MRTS65
• Driven Steel Piles –MRTS66
• Dynamic Testing of piles—MRTS68
3
Basic Foundation Types
• Shallow Foundations
¾ Bearing strata at shallow depths
4
Basic Foundation Types
SHALLOW FOUNDATIONS
5
6
When can we use Shallow Foundations?
7
Shallow Foundation Design – Things
to Consider
• Overturning moment
• Sliding
8
Basic Foundation Types
9
When do we need piles?
• When surface strata are
¾ Weak
¾ Compressible
¾ Erodable
¾ Expansive
11
Pile Use: For resisting lateral loading
12
Pile Use: For resisting uplift
13
Pile Use: Support against scour or lateral loading
due to excavation
14
Pile Use – Further example of lateral support for deep
excavation induced lateral loading
15
Deep Foundations - Pile Types
• Driven piles
¾ Displacement piles
16
Driven Piles - Types and basic
requirement in design
• Types
¾ Octagonal Prestressed Concrete
(PSC)
¾ Reinforced Concrete (RC)
¾ Steel “H Pile”
¾ Timber Piles
19
SITE INVESTIGATION FOR DRIVEN PILES
22
Bored or Cast-in-place Piles
• Types
¾ Short bored piers
¾ Cylinders on rock
¾ Cylinders socketed into rock**
¾ Belled sockets Bedrock
• Bored piles
¾ Could be up to 4 x cost of driven pile
23
Bored Piles - Construction
• Bored piles are cast in place cylindrical piles
• Excavated by
Augers
Buckets
Large drill bit (for hard rock)
Chisel grab and casing oscillator for bouldery
ground, etc.
24
Bored Pile Excavation- Augering
25
Bored Pile Excavation - Bucket
Cleaning Bucket
Drilling Rig
Excavation Bucket 26
Bored Piles – Cylinders
Socketed into rock
Rock Sockets
Rock Sockets
• High compression loads
• Greater resistance to lateral movement
• Socket length 2 to 5 x diameter
• Diameter from 900mm to 1800mm
• High strength rock
¾ Point Load (Is50 > 1 MPa)
¾ Rock anchors preferred to resist large uplift
loads
28
Rock Sockets
• May need casing in overburden soils and
XW rock (SPT N<50)
• Sealing/control of groundwater important
• Capacity to take heavy loads dependent
on extremely clean socket bases –
inspection important (WH&S)
• More expensive - so fewer, larger piles
may be more economical
29
Loads on Bridge Foundations
Structural Engineer to advise, consists of but not limited to
¾ Imposed Loads
¾ + ½ Dead Load – highway bridges
• Vertical Uplift
¾ flood loads in transverse direction
30
Loads on Bridge Foundations
• Horizontal Loads
¾ braking force of vehicle in longitudinal
direction
¾ flood loads in transverse direction
¾ Earthquake
32
Selection of Foundation Type: Loads
• Structural Loads
¾ Heavy compressive loads from large spans
• Hydraulic Issues
¾ Lateral and uplift loads from flood loading
¾ Scour in loose sands and silts
33
Selection of Foundation Type: Environment
• Vibration
¾ proximity to people
¾ vulnerable structures
¾ damage to services
• Aggressiveness due to groundwater
• Obstructions
¾ overhead power lines / headroom
34
Selection of Foundation Type: Logistics
36
Selection of Foundation Type: Geology
• Compressible deposits
• Defects with soft infills
• High head of groundwater
¾ Sealing issues
¾ Hole stability
¾ Concreting
• Rock excavatability
37
Coffee Rock (Indurated Sand)
38
Steeply Dipping Bearing Strata
39
Pile Design - Approaches
PILE DESIGN
Static
Engineering Geology Dynamic
To account for Regional (geology +
Soil Mechanics
various methods of local construction
Rock Mechanics
pile installation practices) Construction
Structural Mechanics Design
Stage Stage
40
PILES - design
41
Pile Design - Geotechnical
The following DESIGN ELEMENTS should be accounted
for in design:
• Foundations: • Approaches
¾ Load capacity ¾ Stability
¾ Settlements ¾ Settlements
¾ Lateral Fixity
¾ Uplift resistance • Interaction
¾ Abutments
• Scour Issues
¾ Widening/
¾ Land/water structures
duplication
42
Pile Capacity
Q
• Q = Pile Capacity
• Qend = End Resistance
• Qshaft = Shaft Resistance Qshaft
• Q = Qend + Qshaft
Qend
43
End versus Shaft Bearing Piles
• Pile in Clay • Pile in End Bearing Pile
Sand
Qend
Qend = 5-10% Qshaft Qend
44
Low load Ultimate load
fs = τ max
fs = τ max
for the
full
fs << τ max length
Base resistance,
fb, mobilized
45
Driven Pile Capacity
Design of Piles
Traditional Approach
Ultimate Geotechnical Capacity =
Ult. Skin Friction + Ult. End Resistance
OR
Pile
51
Pile Load Test
• Why Pile Load Test
¾ Derivation of design parameter
¾ Verification of design load or pile carrying capacity
• MRTS63 Requires that at least 10% of piles at a
site to be tested
• Common methods of pile load test
¾ Static Load Test (Kentledge or Reaction Piles)
¾ Dynamic Test (PDA with CAPWAP)
52
Static Load Test
Kentledge
Reaction Piles
53
Kentledge Set up for Static Pile Load Test
54
Static Load Test – Further example of
Kentledge
55
Dynamic Load Test – Pile Driving Analyser (PDA)
56
PDA – Set Up
57
Typical arrangement of PDA - Schematic
58
Force &
velocity
wave traces
recorded
during initial
driving and
restriking
59
Load-settlement Behaviour
Test Pile: Predicted versus Measured Performance
Site Investigation - Need to get it right
62
Six Mile Creek, Central Qld
63
Six Mile Creek – Footing Plan Area
64
Six Mile Creek: Additional Investigation-DCP
65
Six Mile Creek - Footing Excavation
66
Six Mile Creek: Footing re-design
67
Design Element – Stability and Settlement at
Bridge Approaches
• Stability
• Settlement
68
Different Origins that could Lead to Formation of
Bump at the Approaches to a Bridge
69
Abutment Stability and Settlement
• Compression of Natural Soil Due to
Embankment Load
• What are compressible Soils?
¾ Softclays (SPT N = HW to 6 or Su
<25kPa)
• Where can we find soft clays
(compressible soils)?
¾ Old River Channels
¾ Paleo-channels (very dangerous)
70
Paleo-channels
• GUP, near
Schultz canal
• From old
topography
maps and
airphotos
Abutment Stability and Settlement
• Paleochannels
Old buried channels from previous creek
routes
Deposits of softer younger alluvium
Can be difficult to identify
Create a sudden change in ground conditions
72
Paleo-channels – Long Section
74
Abutment Stability: Soft Clay Issue
Slip Failure - Schematic
75
Abutment Stability and Settlement: Soft Clay Issue
76
Abutment Stability and Settlement: Soft Clay Issue,
Bump at Bridge Approach
Vertical Settlement
77
Abutment Stability and Settlement: Soft Clay Issue,
Differential Settlement
78
Abutment Stability and Settlement: Typical Examples
on Projects in South East Queensland
79
Gateway Arterial – Bald Hills Creek, Stability
Gateway Arterial - Bald Hills Creek
• 3m high
embankment
• 100m failure
during
construction
• Boreholes
150m apart
Bald Hills Creek - Mitigation Strategy
82
Bald Hills Creek, Settlement
≈ 150 mm
predicted
in 1986 by
consultant
≈ 800 mm
by Jul 98
East – West Arterial @ Pound Drain
East – West Arterial @ Pound Drain
• Number of Spans = 3
• Span Length = 13m, 18m & 13m
• Bridge Spillthrough Embankment
9m high with batter Slopes
1(H):1(V)
• Number of Piles at Abutments = 3
Spaced at 6.5m c/c
• Number of Piles at Piers = 5
Spaced at 3.3m c/c
86
Ipswich Motorway - 2009
87
Risks Associated with Soft Clays – Managing
Stability and Settlement
88
Overview of Management Strategies
Reinforced
Embankment
Total Replacement
Temporary
Surcharge 89
Counter Berms Height reduction. Vertical Drains
SELECTION OF DESIGN PARAMETERS
• SOILS
• ROCKS
90
Soils
SAND CLAY
Stiff Soft
CPT
fs qc
CPTu
Soft Clays
qc u Fs/qc/u
Undrained
Strength
Stiff
Soft clay Clay
Shaft Resistance
Stability
End Bearing
94
Selection of Design Parameters: Rock
XW/HW MW/SW
95
Selection of Design Parameters:
Rock Tests
Point Load CNS
UCS Pressuremeter
(Is)50
HW/MW/
MW/SW/Fr
SW/Fr
Shaft Resistance
Settlement of Shaft Resistance
End Bearing Sockets 96
Design Charts (after Poulos)
97
Shaft Resistance
98
Settlement (Poulos 1989)
Settlement (Poulos 1989)