KennyRogers
Structural
- Jan 8, 2014
- 8
Had a few questions on interpreting pore water pressures from VW piezometers installed in clay used for embankment construction - we are planning a staged embankment. Thought I ask the crowd.
1. If there is no activity in the area of an installed piezometer, will the pore pressure vary with fluctuations in the ground water table (GWT)? If it were sand, I would expect this would happen quickly and quite slowly for a clay or silt. Is there any way to estimate how fast the water table would influence the pore pressures if the permeability and increase GWT elevation is known?
2. I have seen data indicating that pore pressures were "stacking up" during embankment construction. For this particular scenario, there was a 2 meter fill was placed, a spike in the pore water was recorded, and then they began to dissipate. However, they didn't return to their initial value. I would have expected pore pressured to return to the existing equilibrium state which is relatively the GWT. Or does pore pressure tend to increase permanently with increases in the overburden pressures? If so, why does the internal pressure not return to an equilibrium state of pressure?
3. Would near by impulse loads (i.e. pile driving, vibratory equipment, etc.) affect the instruments? If so, does anyone know reasonable limits? Is there a way to tell if there has been permanent damage to the instrument?
4. If wick drains are used, and the GWT is used, I would assume this would reduce the effectiveness of the wick drains since the speed/flow rate of water is dependent on the head difference. Is my thinking correct? Within this context, is it possible that a wick drain that is too far from the drainage layer will be essentially ineffective since there isn't enough pressure/capillary draw to remove water?
5. Any decent references on how to interpret piezometer/settlement/displacement data in terms of embankment construction? Are there any guides available to help put together threshold values or warning values?
Cheers!
1. If there is no activity in the area of an installed piezometer, will the pore pressure vary with fluctuations in the ground water table (GWT)? If it were sand, I would expect this would happen quickly and quite slowly for a clay or silt. Is there any way to estimate how fast the water table would influence the pore pressures if the permeability and increase GWT elevation is known?
2. I have seen data indicating that pore pressures were "stacking up" during embankment construction. For this particular scenario, there was a 2 meter fill was placed, a spike in the pore water was recorded, and then they began to dissipate. However, they didn't return to their initial value. I would have expected pore pressured to return to the existing equilibrium state which is relatively the GWT. Or does pore pressure tend to increase permanently with increases in the overburden pressures? If so, why does the internal pressure not return to an equilibrium state of pressure?
3. Would near by impulse loads (i.e. pile driving, vibratory equipment, etc.) affect the instruments? If so, does anyone know reasonable limits? Is there a way to tell if there has been permanent damage to the instrument?
4. If wick drains are used, and the GWT is used, I would assume this would reduce the effectiveness of the wick drains since the speed/flow rate of water is dependent on the head difference. Is my thinking correct? Within this context, is it possible that a wick drain that is too far from the drainage layer will be essentially ineffective since there isn't enough pressure/capillary draw to remove water?
5. Any decent references on how to interpret piezometer/settlement/displacement data in terms of embankment construction? Are there any guides available to help put together threshold values or warning values?
Cheers!