AlaaElnahas
Geotechnical
- Dec 7, 2005
- 12
Dear All,
I am designing a road embankment (35 m wide at its crest )with its height increasing from 4 to 10 m along 420 m to cross a bridge. After the bridge the embankment height goes down from 10 to 3 m. The underlying soil consist of: about 0.9 m Top soil+Man Made Ground , underlain by 2.5-6.2 m Recent Alluvium which consist of V. Soft to Soft Clay, V. Soft to Firm Silt, and Peat. The clay and silt have some traces of peat and organic substances. The SPT in the clay can be as low as 2, and cu of 8-30 kPa with average of 20kPa. The peat thickness is up to 2 m and its bottom level can be as low as 3.9 m below the ground surface. In the geotechnical report, it is mentioned to rising embankment (420 m long)For the Raising embankement, the geotechnical report suggested improving the recent alluvium using band drains below the first 280 m length, and Vibro Concrete Columns with tension membrane for 110 m + CFA piles with tension membrane for 50 m. We are amending the geotechnical report and can make some changes. The cost of the VCC, CFA piles and tension membranes for the embankment and the other one on the other side of the bridge is about 1.2-1.5 million pounds. The tension membrane alone would cost 0.9 Million pounds and the rest for the VCC and CFA piles. I am thinking of using the stone columns with bands drains for the shallow depths of the embankment (about 3-5 m height), and have the following questions:
1- How to make sure that the clay will not be squeezed inside the stone columns and block the drainage path by filling the stone voids?
2- How to choose thye stone grading (is it a filter grading)?
3- How to make quality control on the stone columns (SPT or Plate Load??). Is the SPT is meaningful in stones?
4-How to make sure that the lateral clay displacements below the embankment slope during the clay primary consolidation will not cut the stone columns and subsequently jeoparadise the embnakment slope stability?
5- Is the stone columns a good solution, given the fact that we have peat (fibrous and in some places pseudofibrous) and organic clay and silt, which means good chances for long secondary consolidation? If the answer No, is there a cheaper solution than the Vibro concrete Columns and CFA piles with tension memberane?
6- Is there a design manual to design the improved ground with stone columns?
Thank you
Ala'a
I am designing a road embankment (35 m wide at its crest )with its height increasing from 4 to 10 m along 420 m to cross a bridge. After the bridge the embankment height goes down from 10 to 3 m. The underlying soil consist of: about 0.9 m Top soil+Man Made Ground , underlain by 2.5-6.2 m Recent Alluvium which consist of V. Soft to Soft Clay, V. Soft to Firm Silt, and Peat. The clay and silt have some traces of peat and organic substances. The SPT in the clay can be as low as 2, and cu of 8-30 kPa with average of 20kPa. The peat thickness is up to 2 m and its bottom level can be as low as 3.9 m below the ground surface. In the geotechnical report, it is mentioned to rising embankment (420 m long)For the Raising embankement, the geotechnical report suggested improving the recent alluvium using band drains below the first 280 m length, and Vibro Concrete Columns with tension membrane for 110 m + CFA piles with tension membrane for 50 m. We are amending the geotechnical report and can make some changes. The cost of the VCC, CFA piles and tension membranes for the embankment and the other one on the other side of the bridge is about 1.2-1.5 million pounds. The tension membrane alone would cost 0.9 Million pounds and the rest for the VCC and CFA piles. I am thinking of using the stone columns with bands drains for the shallow depths of the embankment (about 3-5 m height), and have the following questions:
1- How to make sure that the clay will not be squeezed inside the stone columns and block the drainage path by filling the stone voids?
2- How to choose thye stone grading (is it a filter grading)?
3- How to make quality control on the stone columns (SPT or Plate Load??). Is the SPT is meaningful in stones?
4-How to make sure that the lateral clay displacements below the embankment slope during the clay primary consolidation will not cut the stone columns and subsequently jeoparadise the embnakment slope stability?
5- Is the stone columns a good solution, given the fact that we have peat (fibrous and in some places pseudofibrous) and organic clay and silt, which means good chances for long secondary consolidation? If the answer No, is there a cheaper solution than the Vibro concrete Columns and CFA piles with tension memberane?
6- Is there a design manual to design the improved ground with stone columns?
Thank you
Ala'a