lebeuil
Geotechnical
- Nov 11, 2003
- 3
Here's a simple problem. An existing 30 year old masonry/concrete gravity wall needs stabilizing and I'm considering the use of passive soil nails or anchors. The wall is 3.7m high and probably no more than 600-700mm wide. It is proposed to use 3 rows of nail or anchors. I believe there are two ways of looking at the problem.
1. The wall has some inherent structural capacity and the horizontal spacing between the supports (anchors or soil nails) can be quite large i.e. the soil at the back of the wall is not "reinforced".
2. The structural capacity of the wall is minimal and the stabilization works should be based on a genuine 'soil nailed' application i.e. the wall becomes in effect simply a facing element.
My questions are as follows:
For first scenario, what is the earth pressure distribution at the back of the wall? Prior to stabilisation are we dealing with active or at rest conditions? Following the installation of the anchors, again what can of pressure distribution should be assumed (the Engineer has requested that passive resistance should be ignored but with full hydrostactic pressure on the active side). Once the pressure distribution is determined, how do you work out the bending moment/shear forces in the multi-anchored wall? When dealing with embedded flexible structures, the soil-structure interaction dictates the design. But here we're dealing with a "semi-rigid" structure with no passive pressure in front. Can this be analysed a continuous beam with no restraint at the toe? This would seem quite an onerous constraint. Or is the pressure distribution closer to those obtained for strutted excavation?
For the second scenario. When I check the methodology used in design, reference is always made to the vertical spacing of the nails when checking the internal stability of the "reinforced" block of soil. Surely there must be a limiting horizontal spacing so that one indeed deals with a coherent block of soil? There must also still be some bending and shearing within the facing (albeit small). Does this need considering?
Many thanks for (hopefully) your comments
1. The wall has some inherent structural capacity and the horizontal spacing between the supports (anchors or soil nails) can be quite large i.e. the soil at the back of the wall is not "reinforced".
2. The structural capacity of the wall is minimal and the stabilization works should be based on a genuine 'soil nailed' application i.e. the wall becomes in effect simply a facing element.
My questions are as follows:
For first scenario, what is the earth pressure distribution at the back of the wall? Prior to stabilisation are we dealing with active or at rest conditions? Following the installation of the anchors, again what can of pressure distribution should be assumed (the Engineer has requested that passive resistance should be ignored but with full hydrostactic pressure on the active side). Once the pressure distribution is determined, how do you work out the bending moment/shear forces in the multi-anchored wall? When dealing with embedded flexible structures, the soil-structure interaction dictates the design. But here we're dealing with a "semi-rigid" structure with no passive pressure in front. Can this be analysed a continuous beam with no restraint at the toe? This would seem quite an onerous constraint. Or is the pressure distribution closer to those obtained for strutted excavation?
For the second scenario. When I check the methodology used in design, reference is always made to the vertical spacing of the nails when checking the internal stability of the "reinforced" block of soil. Surely there must be a limiting horizontal spacing so that one indeed deals with a coherent block of soil? There must also still be some bending and shearing within the facing (albeit small). Does this need considering?
Many thanks for (hopefully) your comments