MRM
Geotechnical
- Jun 13, 2002
- 345
I saw that Moe had a post (now a closed thread) about DCP to SPT correlations and related items. I thought I'd share a recent paper of mine that considers some things along these lines (SPT to Sowers DCP correlations, various somewhat interesting ways in which the DCP might be used, results of some case studies along with some test pit tests for check into the correlations further, etc.).
My apologies if I've already provided this before, but have since forgotten in all the craziness of life...
The soil featured is a uniform Michigan beach sand. For that type of soil, at least, I'm perfectly fine with taking the Sowers DCP to SPT relationship as an approximate 1:1. Lots of DCPs out there, but I've always been partial to the Sowers DCP for my work. And even if you have a different style, what I've got here may still be able to provide some general insight about trends that you might expect for relative density and SPT-to-DCP correlations...
This little paper was a fun one to put together and present!
I'm currently doing some work in a similar type of way with some of the more well-graded sands that sand and gravel pits generally provide as fill material for construction in eastern Washington. Very interesting, yet not surprisingly, the DCP to relative density correlation for these eastern Washington sands is quite different than the uniform sands!
All the best,
Mark
My apologies if I've already provided this before, but have since forgotten in all the craziness of life...
The soil featured is a uniform Michigan beach sand. For that type of soil, at least, I'm perfectly fine with taking the Sowers DCP to SPT relationship as an approximate 1:1. Lots of DCPs out there, but I've always been partial to the Sowers DCP for my work. And even if you have a different style, what I've got here may still be able to provide some general insight about trends that you might expect for relative density and SPT-to-DCP correlations...
This little paper was a fun one to put together and present!
I'm currently doing some work in a similar type of way with some of the more well-graded sands that sand and gravel pits generally provide as fill material for construction in eastern Washington. Very interesting, yet not surprisingly, the DCP to relative density correlation for these eastern Washington sands is quite different than the uniform sands!
All the best,
Mark