palmahouse
Geotechnical
- Jan 15, 2008
- 46
I am working on a project where micropiles are proposed to support a building with design seismic lateral loads. The literature indicates that battered micropiles should be considered because of the low lateral capacity of vertical micropiles.
I calculated allowable lateral loads for reasonably long piles by taking lateral components of skin-friction capacity. Then, I moved to a laterally loaded pile analysis using L-Pile. What I found, for my project, if you reduce deflection to a tolerable level (one inch), that your allowable lateral load capacities are very low (about one-half of the horizontal component of skin friction capacity), even for battered piles (battered 20 degrees from vertical in this case).
I am calculating only about 5-kip allowable lateral capacity per pile for 8-inch diameter micropiles and a 1-inch lateral deflection - battered or vertical. It seams the low stiffness of small-diameter pile governs whether they are battered or not.
So, this got me thinking - what is the advantage of battered micropiles for a building or other cases if your tolerable deflections are small?
I calculated allowable lateral loads for reasonably long piles by taking lateral components of skin-friction capacity. Then, I moved to a laterally loaded pile analysis using L-Pile. What I found, for my project, if you reduce deflection to a tolerable level (one inch), that your allowable lateral load capacities are very low (about one-half of the horizontal component of skin friction capacity), even for battered piles (battered 20 degrees from vertical in this case).
I am calculating only about 5-kip allowable lateral capacity per pile for 8-inch diameter micropiles and a 1-inch lateral deflection - battered or vertical. It seams the low stiffness of small-diameter pile governs whether they are battered or not.
So, this got me thinking - what is the advantage of battered micropiles for a building or other cases if your tolerable deflections are small?