jvvse
Structural
- Mar 21, 2014
- 52
I ran across something interesting lately. An engineer that uses friction on the face (dirt side) of a retaining wall to resist overturning.
It is interesting because I have never seen this. Even asking other engineers and searching all around the web and my reference material, no one uses friction on the dirt face.
The logic is that, just as you have horizontal friction from the wall bearing on the soil, you also have vertical friction from the active pressure against the retaining wall. The engineer (older guy) even showed me his first soil mechanics book, Soil Mechanics in Engineering Practice, by Karl Terzaghi and Raplh B. Peck, copyright 1948.
In this book, Terzaghi explains soil mechanics and retaining walls, and in a sentence concludes that there would also be friction on the dirt face of the retaining wall.
The engineer understands some people don't use it and it gives him an edge for designing cheaper retaining walls.
Has anyone used this or seen this used? Rough diagram attached.
It is interesting because I have never seen this. Even asking other engineers and searching all around the web and my reference material, no one uses friction on the dirt face.
The logic is that, just as you have horizontal friction from the wall bearing on the soil, you also have vertical friction from the active pressure against the retaining wall. The engineer (older guy) even showed me his first soil mechanics book, Soil Mechanics in Engineering Practice, by Karl Terzaghi and Raplh B. Peck, copyright 1948.
In this book, Terzaghi explains soil mechanics and retaining walls, and in a sentence concludes that there would also be friction on the dirt face of the retaining wall.
The engineer understands some people don't use it and it gives him an edge for designing cheaper retaining walls.
Has anyone used this or seen this used? Rough diagram attached.