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Ignoring Water?

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dcarr82775

Structural
Jun 1, 2009
1,045
I was having a discussion with the regional engineer for a rather large nationwide firm. He told me that he 'ignores' the affects of water table on the embedded portion of cantilever soldier beams (uses a moist unit weight instead of a submerged unit weight). Does anyone know of a rational for that?
 
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Well, if the soil is submerged follows Terzaghi's notion about bearing capacity of a footing with saturated soil that is ( i forgot the notion i think you divide the bearing capacity by 2)
 
I have always taken a buoyant weight of soil for passive resistance below water table. I was not familiar with Terzaghi's 1/2 notion, but it makes sense to me in a basic way. I have simply never heard of someone flat out knowingly ignoring the effects of groundwater on passive resistance in soils.
 
If buoyant soil weighs half as much, passive pressure is half also. I don't see how you can ignore buoyant weight. That being said, there is more going on with soldier beam embedment than just passive pressure. Soldier beam embedment design is a rather empirical process. Shorter soldier beam embedments often work but are hard to prove on paper and are even harder to get approved by a submission reviewer when design references are few.

 
If the soil is saturated and is flowing toward a given axis , then take the saturated density and insert the PWP in the shear strength equation
by doing so you will acknowledge the buoyancy and the flow force of water .
 
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