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Lateral Earth Pressures. N. Sivakugan. Duration: 18 min. Contents. Geotechnical applications K 0 , active & passive states Rankine’s earth pressure theory. A 2-minute break. Design of retaining walls A Mini Quiz. Tie rod. Anchor. Sheet pile. Lateral Support.
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Lateral Earth Pressures N. Sivakugan Duration: 18 min
Contents • Geotechnical applications • K0, active & passive states • Rankine’s earth pressure theory A 2-minute break • Design of retaining walls • A Mini Quiz
Tie rod Anchor Sheet pile Lateral Support In geotechnical engineering, it is often necessary to prevent lateral soil movements. Cantilever retaining wall Braced excavation Anchored sheet pile
Lateral Support We have to estimate the lateral soil pressures acting on these structures, to be able to design them. Soil nailing Gravity Retaining wall Reinforced earth wall
Sheet Pile Sheet piles marked for driving
Sheet Pile Sheet pile wall
Sheet Pile Sheet pile wall During installation
geosynthetics Lateral Support Reinforced earth walls are increasingly becoming popular.
Lateral Support filled with soil Crib walls have been used in Queensland. Good drainage & allow plant growth. Looks good. Interlocking stretchers and headers
GL v’ h’ Earth Pressure at Rest In a homogeneous natural soil deposit, X the ratio h’/v’ is a constant known as coefficient of earth pressure at rest (K0). Importantly, at K0 state, there are no lateral strains.
Poisson’s ratio Estimating K0 For normally consolidated clays and granular soils, K0 = 1 – sin ’ For overconsolidated clays, K0,overconsolidated = K0,normally consolidated OCR0.5 From elastic analysis,
Active/Passive Earth Pressures - in granular soils Wall moves away from soil Wall moves towards soil A B smooth wall Let’s look at the soil elements A and B during the wall movement.
v’ z h’ A Active Earth Pressure - in granular soils v’ = z Initially, there is no lateral movement. h’ = K0 v’ = K0 z As the wall moves away from the soil, v’ remains the same; and h’ decreases till failure occurs. Active state
failure envelope Initially (K0 state) Failure (Active state) decreasing h’ Active Earth Pressure - in granular soils As the wall moves away from the soil, v’ active earth pressure
failure envelope WJM Rankine (1820-1872) Active Earth Pressure - in granular soils [h’]active v’ Rankine’s coefficient of active earth pressure
v’ A 45 + /2 h’ failure envelope 90+ Active Earth Pressure - in granular soils Failure plane is at 45 + /2 to horizontal [h’]active v’
v’ z h’ A h’ K0 state Active state wall movement Active Earth Pressure - in granular soils As the wall moves away from the soil, h’ decreases till failure occurs.
Active Earth Pressure - in cohesive soils Follow the same steps as for granular soils. Only difference is that c 0. Everything else the same as for granular soils.
v’ B h’ Passive Earth Pressure - in granular soils Initially, soil is in K0 state. As the wall moves towards the soil, v’ remains the same, and h’ increases till failure occurs. Passive state
failure envelope Initially (K0 state) Failure (Active state) increasing h’ Passive Earth Pressure - in granular soils As the wall moves towards the soil, passive earth pressure v’
failure envelope Passive Earth Pressure - in granular soils v’ [h’]passive Rankine’s coefficient of passive earth pressure
v’ 45 - /2 A h’ failure envelope 90+ Passive Earth Pressure - in granular soils Failure plane is at 45 - /2 to horizontal [h’]passive v’
v’ B h’ h’ Passive state K0 state wall movement Passive Earth Pressure - in granular soils As the wall moves towards the soil, h’ increases till failure occurs.
Passive Earth Pressure - in cohesive soils Follow the same steps as for granular soils. Only difference is that c 0. Everything else the same as for granular soils.
H PA=0.5 KAH2 h PP=0.5 KPh2 Earth Pressure Distribution - in granular soils [h’]active PA and PP are the resultant active and passive thrusts on the wall [h’]passive KPh KAH
h’ Passive state Active state K0 state Wall movement (not to scale)
Rankine’s Earth Pressure Theory • Assumes smooth wall • Applicable only on vertical walls
Road Train Retaining Walls- Applications
Retaining Walls- Applications highway
basement wall Retaining Walls- Applications High-rise building
cement mortar plain concrete or stone masonry cobbles Gravity Retaining Walls They rely on their self weight to support the backfill
Cantilever Retaining Walls Reinforced; smaller section than gravity walls They act like vertical cantilever, fixed to the ground
2 2 Block no. 3 3 1 1 toe toe Analyse the stability of this rigid body with vertical walls (Rankine theory valid) Design of Retaining Wall - in granular soils Wi = weight of block i xi = horizontal distance of centroid of block i from toe
soil-concrete friction angle 0.5 – 0.7 2 2 PA H 3 PA 3 1 PP 1 S h PP toe S R toe R y y Safety against sliding along the base to be greater than 1.5 PP= 0.5 KPh2 PA= 0.5 KAH2
2 2 PA H 3 PA 3 1 PP 1 S h PP toe S R toe R y y Safety against overturning about toe to be greater than 2.0
Points to Ponder How does the key help in improving the stability against sliding? Shouldn’t we design retaining walls to resist at-rest (than active) earth pressures since the thrust on the wall is greater in K0 state (K0 > KA)?