ruleofthumb
Geotechnical
- Jul 9, 2021
- 5
I am a junior geotechnical engineer and currently working on a proposed two storey school. The drilling has been finished for the school and the general soil profile is essentially a silt-dominated soil with some clay and sand from the existing grade to about 4m below. The 'N' values range from 15 to 25 revealing a compact material. This material has minor dilation. The soil gets considerably worse as we go deeper. Below 4m it is heavily dilated in comparison with the upper layer. N values range from 7 to 12. On-site when I was supervising the drilling activity it was my understanding that helical piers would be a viable solution as the first 4m would be sufficient despite it being dilated and I was told by my superior to terminate the first borehole at 12m as it was initially only supposed to go to 8m. So here comes the issue, there was a preliminary geotechnical investigation done four years prior and they recommended conventional spread/strip footings for the school, and the soil we had determined to have minor dilation in our borehole logs was not dilated in their reports. Another issue is that after speaking with the helical pier contractors, they may extra boreholes that go beyond 12m as there is a possibility that helical piers would have to go that deep.
Are there any other solutions to dealing with dilated material? My boss won't ever put a footing on material that had minor dilation as it would make the base unstable and prone to excessive settlement. Is there a possibility that the material that we have as minor dilation was not dilated four years ago? and it is a practice to never put footings on dilated material even if it minor or is subject to the experience of the engineer. It's been tough trying to find material on this so any input would be much appreciated.
Are there any other solutions to dealing with dilated material? My boss won't ever put a footing on material that had minor dilation as it would make the base unstable and prone to excessive settlement. Is there a possibility that the material that we have as minor dilation was not dilated four years ago? and it is a practice to never put footings on dilated material even if it minor or is subject to the experience of the engineer. It's been tough trying to find material on this so any input would be much appreciated.