CoryChamberlain
Structural
- Nov 14, 2003
- 6
I am dealing with sheet pile problem and would appreciate any advice you may have.
My previous boss (who is now deceased) designed a sheet pile wall system adjacent to a railroad. The system is cantilever PZ-27 sheets for the majority of the wall where the retained height is 15' with a 2:1 sloping backfill up to the closest track which is located approximatly 20' (min)from the wall. A some locations the wall is tied back due to an increase in wall height. Most of the back fill is ballast or sand. The first 5' to 7.5' of embedment is silty clay, black mottled soft clay with a qu averaging about 1 tsf wall. The next next 13 feet or so is a hard clayey silt with a moisture content of around 10%, qu exceeding 4.5 tsf and spt exceeding 90 blows/ft. Rock occurs at about 20'. The piles were fitted with shoes and driven to about 15' embedment.
During driving, another structural engineer was contacted to elviate the ballast rolling from the driving operations. Their solution was to add about 3' of ballast before the wall was driven to the specified tip elevation.
Also at this location, the piles hit possible obstructions and were cut short of specified lengths (ranging from 1 to 4').This area has been monitored since excavation and some of the deflections are nearing 6" near the top.
My boss had designed for 800 psf strip loading for cooper E68, with bousinesq and no hydrostatic pressures.
I have considered supplemental reinforcing for the wall such as tiebacks or cantilever soldier piles (drilled to rock) placed in front of the walls, but I am not exacly sure how to handle the residual stresses in the pile and earth. Removal of the backfill and using a deadman pile for straiting/anchoring doesn't appear to be an option.
What are the stability checks to perform for the toe if tie backs at the top are added? What forces are the tiebacks, soldier piles and wales designed for since deflection has loading has already occured? When adding tiebacks, are the soil pressures still active behind the wall? What are the ways to analyze the long term delfection for creep and seasonal variations in the soil the cantilver section with and without remedial reinforcing to ensure deflections are tolerable?
Any other experiences and solutions with a similar situations would be useful.
Thanks
My previous boss (who is now deceased) designed a sheet pile wall system adjacent to a railroad. The system is cantilever PZ-27 sheets for the majority of the wall where the retained height is 15' with a 2:1 sloping backfill up to the closest track which is located approximatly 20' (min)from the wall. A some locations the wall is tied back due to an increase in wall height. Most of the back fill is ballast or sand. The first 5' to 7.5' of embedment is silty clay, black mottled soft clay with a qu averaging about 1 tsf wall. The next next 13 feet or so is a hard clayey silt with a moisture content of around 10%, qu exceeding 4.5 tsf and spt exceeding 90 blows/ft. Rock occurs at about 20'. The piles were fitted with shoes and driven to about 15' embedment.
During driving, another structural engineer was contacted to elviate the ballast rolling from the driving operations. Their solution was to add about 3' of ballast before the wall was driven to the specified tip elevation.
Also at this location, the piles hit possible obstructions and were cut short of specified lengths (ranging from 1 to 4').This area has been monitored since excavation and some of the deflections are nearing 6" near the top.
My boss had designed for 800 psf strip loading for cooper E68, with bousinesq and no hydrostatic pressures.
I have considered supplemental reinforcing for the wall such as tiebacks or cantilever soldier piles (drilled to rock) placed in front of the walls, but I am not exacly sure how to handle the residual stresses in the pile and earth. Removal of the backfill and using a deadman pile for straiting/anchoring doesn't appear to be an option.
What are the stability checks to perform for the toe if tie backs at the top are added? What forces are the tiebacks, soldier piles and wales designed for since deflection has loading has already occured? When adding tiebacks, are the soil pressures still active behind the wall? What are the ways to analyze the long term delfection for creep and seasonal variations in the soil the cantilver section with and without remedial reinforcing to ensure deflections are tolerable?
Any other experiences and solutions with a similar situations would be useful.
Thanks