LRJ
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 28, 2016
- 269
I was reading a paper which stated the pile tip torsional capacity was as follows:
Tt = π.(D/2)2.L.γ.(D/3).tan(δ)
Where:
Tt = Pile tip torsional capacity
π = pi (3.14...)
D = Pile diameter
L = Pile length
γ = Material unit weight (concrete in the example)
δ = Interface friction angle at pile tip
I understand where everything apart from the (D/3) part comes from. Can anyone shed some light on what the (D/3) part relates to/how it is derived?
EDIT: Essentially the above comes down to:
Tt = τ.(D/3)
Where:
τ = shear stress
I'm not sure why shear stress is multiplied by D/3.
Tt = π.(D/2)2.L.γ.(D/3).tan(δ)
Where:
Tt = Pile tip torsional capacity
π = pi (3.14...)
D = Pile diameter
L = Pile length
γ = Material unit weight (concrete in the example)
δ = Interface friction angle at pile tip
I understand where everything apart from the (D/3) part comes from. Can anyone shed some light on what the (D/3) part relates to/how it is derived?
EDIT: Essentially the above comes down to:
Tt = τ.(D/3)
Where:
τ = shear stress
I'm not sure why shear stress is multiplied by D/3.