swazimatt
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 19, 2009
- 266
We are doing a new industrial subdivision and the insitu subgrade is quite variable. The natural material is (top down) topsoil - sands (CBR 6) - cohesive silt layer (Cbr 1 and lower) and rock. The depths vary across the site. the pavement has been designed for a CBR6 subgrade with subgrade improvement for lower quality subgrade
Where the pavement is in the cohesive layer we will cut out and replace with subgrade improvememnt layer 600mm thick (CBR10) with a separation geotextile and geogrid at the base but on our circly design we will still not acheive the required 1.2mm benkleman beam deflections. (this is question 1 - any advice to improve this?)
My main question is, where our pavement is still sitting in the upper sandy layer (CBR6 no subgrade improvement layers), what depth should the insitu subgrade be a minimum of CBR6, knowing that there is a weak subgrade layer somewhere underneath it? If we have 400mm of sand and then the cheasive silt under that is that ok? My feeling is that we should have at least 600mm of CBR6 under the pavement, but i do not want to have to remove 400mm of soil if i don't have to. the silt is confined and can't go anywhere (is this a valid point?).
Where the pavement is in the cohesive layer we will cut out and replace with subgrade improvememnt layer 600mm thick (CBR10) with a separation geotextile and geogrid at the base but on our circly design we will still not acheive the required 1.2mm benkleman beam deflections. (this is question 1 - any advice to improve this?)
My main question is, where our pavement is still sitting in the upper sandy layer (CBR6 no subgrade improvement layers), what depth should the insitu subgrade be a minimum of CBR6, knowing that there is a weak subgrade layer somewhere underneath it? If we have 400mm of sand and then the cheasive silt under that is that ok? My feeling is that we should have at least 600mm of CBR6 under the pavement, but i do not want to have to remove 400mm of soil if i don't have to. the silt is confined and can't go anywhere (is this a valid point?).