dweiman
Structural
- Dec 4, 2003
- 10
Hi All,
I am looking to design wingwalls for a culvert. The height of retained earth is approx. 17.5 ft. (worst case). The soil is a clayey/silty loam with cobbles. Soil assumptions are an E.F.P of 45 psf (Geotech Report), Soil Weight = 120 pcf, and angle of internal friction = 20 deg. (Std Handbook) My question is - What is the difference between a Rankine analysis vs. an Equivalent Fluid Pressure analysis for retaining wall design? I'm running RetainPro 6.0 software and the Rankine anaysis method gives me a much more conservative design. Is there any correlation between the E.F.P of a soil and its angle of internal friction? Is there any reason to prefer one analysis over the other, other than potential savings on concrete? Any advice would be appreciated.
I am looking to design wingwalls for a culvert. The height of retained earth is approx. 17.5 ft. (worst case). The soil is a clayey/silty loam with cobbles. Soil assumptions are an E.F.P of 45 psf (Geotech Report), Soil Weight = 120 pcf, and angle of internal friction = 20 deg. (Std Handbook) My question is - What is the difference between a Rankine analysis vs. an Equivalent Fluid Pressure analysis for retaining wall design? I'm running RetainPro 6.0 software and the Rankine anaysis method gives me a much more conservative design. Is there any correlation between the E.F.P of a soil and its angle of internal friction? Is there any reason to prefer one analysis over the other, other than potential savings on concrete? Any advice would be appreciated.