craigmcg
Structural
- Jan 23, 2007
- 35
I have a question regarding the design of a batter pile that braces a sheet pile retaining wall through compression. In reviewing a couple designs performed by other engineers, I am tending to disagree with their analysis methodology, which is similar to how a truss is analyzed. This is as follows:
1. Obtain lateral reaction force from soil loads on sheet pile wall.
2. Load transfers to top of batter pile through sheet pile cap as a horizontal and vertical force component.
3. Length of batter pile is then designed to the axial capacity of the soil. This is idealized as a pinned connection at the pile tip, and therefore a truss member is theoretically possible.
Like a truss, the loads are applied at the ends and the pile becomes a simple tension/compression member. This would be fine, except the embedded portion of the pile will experience midspan loading from the soil restraint, and a moment will therefore occur. Does this sound about right?
1. Obtain lateral reaction force from soil loads on sheet pile wall.
2. Load transfers to top of batter pile through sheet pile cap as a horizontal and vertical force component.
3. Length of batter pile is then designed to the axial capacity of the soil. This is idealized as a pinned connection at the pile tip, and therefore a truss member is theoretically possible.
Like a truss, the loads are applied at the ends and the pile becomes a simple tension/compression member. This would be fine, except the embedded portion of the pile will experience midspan loading from the soil restraint, and a moment will therefore occur. Does this sound about right?