galsenstruct
Structural
- Mar 24, 2014
- 3
In using Caquot and Kerisel method to estimate passive earth pressure coefficient Kp (AASHTO Fig 3.11.5.4-2), for the special case of soldier pile and lagging wall (drilled shaft / H-pile), is it more prudent to ignore wall friction?
I would like the opinions of the more experience engineers here.
Per FHWA-NHI-10-016 Drilled Shafts manual (page 12-50):
"For passive earth pressure, large values of wall friction with a wedge-type
solution derived from Coulomb theory can be unconservative and therefore it is recommended that wall friction be taken as zero."
Per NAVFAC DM7-02 (page 7.2-112):
"For granular soils, determine K+p, without wall friction".
Per civil tech shoring suite manual:
"The wall friction in the passive zone is insignificant should be ignored because the area within the soldier pile is too small"
In your experience in designing soldier pile walls what value of delta do you typically use? What range of Kp values have you use before? Does Kp values >20 sound unreasonable?
Thanks
I would like the opinions of the more experience engineers here.
Per FHWA-NHI-10-016 Drilled Shafts manual (page 12-50):
"For passive earth pressure, large values of wall friction with a wedge-type
solution derived from Coulomb theory can be unconservative and therefore it is recommended that wall friction be taken as zero."
Per NAVFAC DM7-02 (page 7.2-112):
"For granular soils, determine K+p, without wall friction".
Per civil tech shoring suite manual:
"The wall friction in the passive zone is insignificant should be ignored because the area within the soldier pile is too small"
In your experience in designing soldier pile walls what value of delta do you typically use? What range of Kp values have you use before? Does Kp values >20 sound unreasonable?
Thanks