Mccoy
Geotechnical
- Nov 9, 2000
- 907
I'm rising again this topic because the latest, final draft of EC7 and some reasoning at last made it clear to me a few things:
1) characteristic values can be chosen in different ways:
simply out of consolidated experience, without samples or tests.
Out of official tables or databases, with very cautious values of soil groups (Germany and Russia, maybe Switzerland are proceeding this way).
As a personal cautious estimate of values from tests or samples; the estimate is based on personal engineering judgment.
As a statistical analysis of data from tests/samples.
2) in case of characteristic values from statistical data analysis, you have to consider 2 cases:
a) limit state entails large soil volumes: k-value is the 5th percentile of the distribution of the mean, that is the monolateral confidence interval of the mean with alpha= 95%
b)limit state entails small volumes: k-value is the 5th percentile of the sample. Such value is usually smaller then the previous.
The rationale in this is that if a failure surface runs thru a large volume, fluctuations in the geotechnical parameters of interest tend to cancel out. Conversely, in small volumes (i.e.: pile tips) all you can have is a single fluctuation, so it is not the mean which governs, but the whole distribution.
To make things clear: assume a failure surface under a large footing has a fixed geometry, which does not vary according to location of more resistant and less resistant parts of soil ("homogeneous" layer). In this case the global resistance will be the sum of the resistances within small representative volumes of soil, divided by the number of such volumes which intersect the failure surface. That is, the arithmetic mean of resistance values along the surface. Since we have usually only a few samples or data, we have to account for epistemic uncertainty, so the average is not fixed, but is a distribution itself. The distribution of this average governs the limit state, and a conservative value of such distribution is its 5th percentile. With a minimum of 5-6 data, not too dispersed, such 5h percentile turns out not to be too distant from the mean value.
Then this value, the carachteristic value, shall have to be further reduced by means of a partial safety factor, to become a design value to be introduced in bearing capacity equations. Finally, there might be a global safety factor, according to the various design approaches.
You American guys are lucky that carachteristic values find no place in LRFD. Yet. Japan, China and Australia (New Zealand as well, I reckon) are adopting, or have already adopted in part, a system similar to Europe.
In the case where the failure surface is affected by less resistant volumes, then we should look into the distribution of the geometric mean or the harmonic mean (see Gordon Fenton explanations to BigH and Vad). But this is not going to be simple, we may have to use techniques such as the bootstrap or Bayesian analysis.