PEStruc
Civil/Environmental
- Mar 27, 2014
- 11
Hi Everyone,
I have a project in lake Michigan and it’s basically a marine dock fixed on piles in lake Michigan. I’m trying to calculate the uplift force on the piles due to the ice. The historical ice thickness is 30”, pile dia. is 12”, pile height above the lake bed is 14’ and it has an embedment of 24’, so total length = 38’ . I used AASHTO eq.3.9.5-1 for determining the vertical force due to ice adhesion as follows:
Fv= 80 t2 (0.35 +0.03R/t0.75)
where:
Fv= Vertical force in kips
R= radius if ft.
t= ice thickness in ft.
Since the above equation doesn’t address the type of the material, so I’m not sure whether shall I use the ice uplift force from the above equation times the coefficient between the ice and pile material (steel) in order to determine the ice uplift force in the pile design? Or shall I take the force as is from the above equation without multiplying it in friction factor. There will be a huge difference between the two approaches.
Also, I checked great lakes small craft harbor and structure design for ice conditions : An engineering manual by Allen Wortley, university of Wisconsin sea grant institute, however it has the same problem as it doesn’t address the used material for the determined ice uplift force and I’m not sure if I shall use the friction factor times the uplift load or not. I would appreciate if anyone has an answer for the above question.
Thanks
I have a project in lake Michigan and it’s basically a marine dock fixed on piles in lake Michigan. I’m trying to calculate the uplift force on the piles due to the ice. The historical ice thickness is 30”, pile dia. is 12”, pile height above the lake bed is 14’ and it has an embedment of 24’, so total length = 38’ . I used AASHTO eq.3.9.5-1 for determining the vertical force due to ice adhesion as follows:
Fv= 80 t2 (0.35 +0.03R/t0.75)
where:
Fv= Vertical force in kips
R= radius if ft.
t= ice thickness in ft.
Since the above equation doesn’t address the type of the material, so I’m not sure whether shall I use the ice uplift force from the above equation times the coefficient between the ice and pile material (steel) in order to determine the ice uplift force in the pile design? Or shall I take the force as is from the above equation without multiplying it in friction factor. There will be a huge difference between the two approaches.
Also, I checked great lakes small craft harbor and structure design for ice conditions : An engineering manual by Allen Wortley, university of Wisconsin sea grant institute, however it has the same problem as it doesn’t address the used material for the determined ice uplift force and I’m not sure if I shall use the friction factor times the uplift load or not. I would appreciate if anyone has an answer for the above question.
Thanks