Dirt Guy
Geotechnical
- Feb 15, 2024
- 4
I am working on a project where the geotechnical design engineer has implemented a piled raft foundation for a bridge. The soil conditions in the area consist of relatively weak saturated glacial lacustrine clays (CH). In order to construct the bridge at the required elevation, an excavation on the order of 40 feet is required. Upon completion of the excavation (removal of overburden soils), the designer has recommended placement of a 5-ft thick gravel layer followed by installation of H-piles through the gravel layer into dense glacial tills approximately 30 feet below the soft clays. The H-piles will be spaced 10 to 20 ft O.C. beneath the approximately 75'x300' concrete mat footprint. The cutoff elevation of the piles will be at approximately the mid-point of the gravel layer. The design engineer has incorporated two geogrids layers within the gravel thickness (2.5 feet) above the tops of the piles for support and distribution of the structural loading. Once this is complete, the engineer will pour a reinforced concrete mat with a thickness of 4 feet to form the base of the structure (for support of bridge pier walls/abutments, etc.). The native soils are prone to rebound upon unloading. In this case, when the overburden soils are removed, the stress decrease is estimated to be around 2,600 psf across the footprint of the structure. When the structure is finally constructed, it is supposed the structure will reapply a load of approximately 1,500 psf across the footprint of the mat. My question is this. If you are unloading the site and only partially reapplying the load and all settlement analyses show a net rebound at the site over the life of the structure, what purpose are the H-piles providing if they are not attached to anything (endbear in glacial till and not attached at the top to the concrete structure)? In addition, the H-piles do not have plates welded on top. The engineer claims the piles will reduce the total rebound of the native clays from 3 inches (without piles) to less than 1 inch with piles. Can someone reasonably explain the process of how the piles will benefit the structure?