KeithGray
Structural
- Dec 26, 2002
- 5
I am a bridge designer and have always designed long heeled retaining walls with either at-rest or Rankine Active lateral earth pressure theory. I have always learned that Coulomb lateral earth pressure was for short heeled walls and that the vertical soil pressure could not be used in the overturning calcs when Coulomb was used.
I'm now being told that Coulomb can be used in place of Rankine for almost all walls, including long heeled retaining walls. The theory now is that a wedge of soil develops over the heel that doesn't move and that creates a batter that the lateral pressure acts against. You get friction between the soil and soil that helps your overturning calculations. I think it's limited to 2/3 of the soil friction angle.
I'm also being told that you can take the full weight of the soil above the footing into account when calculating the resistance to overturning.
Coulomb theroy almost always gives me shorter heels so it seems like I would never use Rankine again in my calculations.
Have any of you heard that you can use Coulomb for long heeled retaining walls?
Can you explain when you would still use Rankine?
Can you explain why the engineering community has used Rankine for so long when Coulomb was developed earlier and would have given us more economical walls?
I'm now being told that Coulomb can be used in place of Rankine for almost all walls, including long heeled retaining walls. The theory now is that a wedge of soil develops over the heel that doesn't move and that creates a batter that the lateral pressure acts against. You get friction between the soil and soil that helps your overturning calculations. I think it's limited to 2/3 of the soil friction angle.
I'm also being told that you can take the full weight of the soil above the footing into account when calculating the resistance to overturning.
Coulomb theroy almost always gives me shorter heels so it seems like I would never use Rankine again in my calculations.
Have any of you heard that you can use Coulomb for long heeled retaining walls?
Can you explain when you would still use Rankine?
Can you explain why the engineering community has used Rankine for so long when Coulomb was developed earlier and would have given us more economical walls?