hughits
Geotechnical
- May 25, 2006
- 16
I am a structural engineer working on driving steel pipe piles for an oil sands treatment facilities. Based on the soils report and design drawings, the design embedment of most of the piles range from 20 m to 26 m. The pile top cut-off elev. is about 1.5 m above the final grade, so the total pile length would be 1.5 m longer than the design embedment. For additional info, each pile will support a steel column (no skid or concrete pile cap).
Most of the piles we have been driving met the design embedment, but there were several piles that hit early refusal. Some of them needed to be driven about 26 m deep but were actually driven 20-21 m. The rest of them are quite or way off of the design depth. They needed to be driven about 24 m but were actually driven only 7-8 m. Since we had more than 100 blow counts at the refusals, I wouldn't worry about the pile axial compression capacity, which was also confirmed by our geotechnical consultant. The concern is the piles tensile capacity. The design tensile capacity is way more than the actual capacities we will get from those piles.
Now we are trying to come up with ideas to fix this up. One solution we are discussing is to take them out, drill the holes down to 20 m or something, and put them back in the holes, and backfill it. I would like to perform additional borings around the area, but the client wouldn't accept it.
I am wondering if there are any better ideas out there. Any idea, opinion, and/or recommendation on this issue would be highly appreciated.
Thanks.
Most of the piles we have been driving met the design embedment, but there were several piles that hit early refusal. Some of them needed to be driven about 26 m deep but were actually driven 20-21 m. The rest of them are quite or way off of the design depth. They needed to be driven about 24 m but were actually driven only 7-8 m. Since we had more than 100 blow counts at the refusals, I wouldn't worry about the pile axial compression capacity, which was also confirmed by our geotechnical consultant. The concern is the piles tensile capacity. The design tensile capacity is way more than the actual capacities we will get from those piles.
Now we are trying to come up with ideas to fix this up. One solution we are discussing is to take them out, drill the holes down to 20 m or something, and put them back in the holes, and backfill it. I would like to perform additional borings around the area, but the client wouldn't accept it.
I am wondering if there are any better ideas out there. Any idea, opinion, and/or recommendation on this issue would be highly appreciated.
Thanks.