longisland
Geotechnical
- Sep 25, 1999
- 82
Hi,
I'm constructing a piled retaining wall over a soft ground. The borelog shows the first 30ft is very soft clay with plasticity index of 40 & average SPT of 2. The water table is 1 ft below the existing ground. I will raise the platform level by 4ft with compacted fill. I've referred to Bowles on downdrag. The method suggested is beta method. Since no triaxial test was conducted, is it sensible to use the chart in Bowles chapter 2 to obtain the phi value from plasticity index? I'm assuming undisturbed clay. The phi is roughly 24. The problem I have with chart is it does not indicate whether it's soft or stiff clay & hence a lot of guess work. The other issue I have is the density of the soil. The bulk density 1s only 80ib/cu.ft. If the density of water is deducted, that leaves 20lb/cu.ft.
Is there other better way to compute the downdrag?
Another way I tried is by using SPT N value but I don't think it's a correct approach since I'm dealing with peat.
I hope some of you folks can shade some light here
I'm constructing a piled retaining wall over a soft ground. The borelog shows the first 30ft is very soft clay with plasticity index of 40 & average SPT of 2. The water table is 1 ft below the existing ground. I will raise the platform level by 4ft with compacted fill. I've referred to Bowles on downdrag. The method suggested is beta method. Since no triaxial test was conducted, is it sensible to use the chart in Bowles chapter 2 to obtain the phi value from plasticity index? I'm assuming undisturbed clay. The phi is roughly 24. The problem I have with chart is it does not indicate whether it's soft or stiff clay & hence a lot of guess work. The other issue I have is the density of the soil. The bulk density 1s only 80ib/cu.ft. If the density of water is deducted, that leaves 20lb/cu.ft.
Is there other better way to compute the downdrag?
Another way I tried is by using SPT N value but I don't think it's a correct approach since I'm dealing with peat.
I hope some of you folks can shade some light here