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Lecture9 - 20171209 - Part 2

This document provides an overview of shallow foundations, including design requirements, bearing capacity analysis, and settlement analysis. It discusses different types of shallow foundations like spread footings, mat foundations, and discusses factors that influence the design such as soil conditions, loading, and groundwater level. The document also covers bearing capacity theories by Terzaghi and Vesic, and provides design examples for calculating the ultimate bearing capacity of square footings.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
32 views39 pages

Lecture9 - 20171209 - Part 2

This document provides an overview of shallow foundations, including design requirements, bearing capacity analysis, and settlement analysis. It discusses different types of shallow foundations like spread footings, mat foundations, and discusses factors that influence the design such as soil conditions, loading, and groundwater level. The document also covers bearing capacity theories by Terzaghi and Vesic, and provides design examples for calculating the ultimate bearing capacity of square footings.

Uploaded by

cknhelen
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 39

Top-up Course for TCP T3 on GIFW and Building

Works with Significant Geotechnical Content

Topic 7: Foundations
Part 1: Shallow foundations

Prof Limin Zhang


The Hong Kong University of Science ad Technology

1
Shallow Foundations

 Summary of design requirements


 Bearing capacity
 Settlement analysis

2
Definition
V = vertical load (live + dead) from superstructure;
Wf = weight of the footing, including soil above;
V W f V
D = embedment depth;
p   uD Dw = depth of water table below ground;
A A = area of the foundation (= B for strip footing, =
B2 for square, = BL for rectangular);
uD = pore water pressure at foundation level;
p' = effective bearing pressure;
qult = ultimate bearing capacity.
Wf

Dw D

A
Foundation level

Shallow Foundations
3
Shallow
foundations (I):
spread footings
(a) Square
(b) Rectangular
(c) Circular
(d) Continuous
(e) Combined
(f) Ring

4
Shallow foundations: Mats (rafts)
Very large spread footings that
usually encompass the entire
footprint of structure

Good for
 Large load or poor soil
conditions
 Erratic soils prone to
differential settlement
 Erratic loads prone to
differential settlement
 Underground space – box
foundation
 Nonuniform lateral load
 Water-proofing
5
Shallow foundations: Economy
Shallow foundations, where applicable, are often the cheapest
foundation type. HKUST Enterprise Center

The foundation below is for a 16-story


building (1 Beacon Hill). It sits on CDG
and has a depth of 3.0 m, which is just
slightly larger than the pile cap thickness
for deep foundations at the same site.

HKUST 10-story student hostel

6
Shallow foundations: Construction
Usually involving backhoe excavation and concreting, with
or without backfilling and formworks.

7
Shallow foundations: Construction

8
Design summary (I): Depth
 Structural requirements (the rhs table Structural
for square and rectangular footings) to requirements
accommodate the required footing
thickness Load Min.
(kN) D
 Shear capacity (mm)
 Bearing capacity 0-300 300
 Geological concerns 300-500 400
 Depth of surface weak soil 500-800 500
 Depth of frost penetration 800-1100 600
 Depth of greatest moisture fluctuation 1100-1500 700
(expansive or collapsible soils) 1500-2000 800
 Depth of potential scour 2000-2700 900
 Possible landslides (see footings on 2700-3500 1000
slopes)

9
Design summary (II): Plan
 Load eccentricity requirement - no tension
6eB 6eL
 1
B L
 Allowable vertical bearing capacity requirement
P W f
for concentric loads
q   uD  qa
BL

P W f
for eccentric loads
q   uD  qa
B'L' B’ = B - 2eB, L’ = L - 2eL

 Allowable horizontal shear capacity requirement


V  Va
 Allowable total settlement and differential settlement
S  [S], DS  [DS]
10
Shallow Foundations

 Summary of design requirements


 Bearing capacity
 Settlement analysis

11
Bearing capacity: Failure modes
(a) General shear
failure (strongly
dilative soil
bahaviour)

(b) Local shear


failure

(c) Punching shear


failure
(contractive)

12
W
W

D D

13
Terzaghi’s bearing capacity theory
Assumptions
 Rigid strip foundation
 Concentric load
 The bottom of the
foundation is sufficiently
rough that no sliding
occurs between
foundation and soil
 Slip surface at a max
depth of B below the base
 Shear strength of soil

t = c+ s tan f

 General shear failure


mode governs
 The soil within a depth D
has no shear strength.

14
Terzaghi’s bearing capacity theory
Basic equation for a strip footing:
qult= c’Nc + szD’ Nq + 0.5g’BNg
For f = 0 For f > 0
N q
1
N c  5 .7 Nc 
tan f

2  ( 0 . 75  f / 360 ) tan f
e
N q

( 45  f / 2 )
2
2 cos

tan f  K pg  2 tan f ( N q  1 )
Ng    1 
 
f 1  0 . 4 sin( 4 f )
2
2  cos 

Modified equation for a square and circular footing:


qult= 1.3c’Nc + szD’ Nq + 0.4g’BNg Square

qult= 1.3c’Nc + szD’ Nq + 0.3g’BNg Circular


15
16
Design value of g' – effect of water table
Case 1: Case 2: Case 3:
Dw≤D D<Dw<D+B D+B≤Dw

B D+B
Dw

gg g   D w  D 
w g   g  g w 1    gg
  B 

17
Vesic’s bearing capacity theory
(1973, 1975)

Vesic retained Terzaghi’s basic format and added additional factors:

q ult  c ' N c z cs z ci z ct z z s N qz z qi z qt z z  0 . 5 g ' BN g z g s z g i z g t z g g z g d


,
cg cd zD qs qg qd

zcs, zqs, zgs = shape factors


zci, zqi, zgi = load inclination factors
zct, zqt, zgt = base tilting factors
zcg, zqg, zgg = ground sloping factors
zcd, zqd, zgd = depth factors
g’: need correction when Dw<B+D
18
Vesic’s bearing capacity theory
Notation for load inclination, base tilting and
ground inclination.

19
(Page 43) No depth factors are included
as the beneficial effect of foundation
embedment is unreliable because of
possible construction activities in future.
20
Vesic’s Bearing Capacity Factors

21
Bearing capacity of footing on or
near slopes
The bearing capacity theories of Meyerhof, Hansen,
and Vesic all consider the effects of slope. These
effects include
 The reduction in lateral support makes bearing failures
more likely.
 The foundation might be undermined if a shallow landslide
were to occur.
 Downhill creeping may cause the footing to move slowly
down the slope.

22
Bearing capacity of footing on or near slopes:
Garnier et al. (2000) test results

B
d

23
Code of
Practice for
Foundations
2016

24
Design example: square footing
• Problem
Design of a square spread footing in a sand. Embedment depth
D=1.8 m, g=17.5 kN/m3, c’=0, f’=31. Ground water table is at a
great depth. Dead load=2500 kN, live load=785 kN

• Solution
Rn Rn = Nominal resistance (nominal ultimate bearing capacity)

FS
  Qi FS = Factor of safety
Qi = Nominal load effect

Total load=2500+785=3285 kN
Using Terzaghi’s bearing capacity theory and FS=3.0
B=2.8 m
Pa=3296 kN using Excel spreadsheet BEARING
25
Accuracy of bearing capacity analysis
Footings in clay: Bishop
and Bjerrum (1960)
investigated 14 failure
cases or load tests and
found that the
computed Factor of
safety is within 10% of
the true value 1.0.
Largest uncertainty: su

Footings in sand: very


difficult to induce failure
in large footings.
Usually controlled by
settlement. Footings on sands

26
27
Shallow Foundations

 Summary of design requirements


 Bearing capacity
 Settlement analysis

28
Settlement is caused by induced
stresses in soil!
Bearing pressure: q
Net bearing pressure: q – sZD’
Induced stress at z: D
Dsz = Is (q – sZD’) q
Is  stress influence factor
which may be calculated
based on Boussinesq’s szo+Dsz
method

29
Craig Soil Mechanics

30
Settlement analysis: Components
Total settlement r = ri + rc+ rs
 Distortion (immediate?) settlement ri
The change in shape or distortion of the soil beneath the
foundation (at no volume change).
 Primary consolidation settlement rc
Occurs during dissipation of pore water pressure and expulsion
of water from voids in the soil. Often takes substantial time in
cohesive soils, but is insignificant in cohesionless soils.
 Secondary compression settlement rs
A form of creep that is largely controlled by the rate at which
the skeleton of compressible soils can yield and compress,
particularly for foundations on clay, silts and peats.

31
Primary consolidation settlement
s  0 ' Ds 
For s  0 ' s p ' s  0 ' Ds  S p  H s ( CR log )
s0'
s  0 ' Ds  s p'
For s  0 ' s p ' s  0 ' D s  S p
 H s ( CR log  RR log )
s p' s0'

s 0 ' Ds 
For s  0 ' s  0 ' D s   s p ' S p
 H s ( RR log )
s0'

Where σv0' = initial effective stress in the soil layer.


σp' = effective preconsolidation pressure, which is the maximum
effective vertical stress that has acted on the soil layer in the
past and can be determined from laboratory oedometer tests
Δσv = change in effective stress due to the fill and future imposed
load on the soil layer to be considered
Sp = ultimate primary consolidation settlement of the layer
concerned
Hs = thickness of the soil layer to be considered
CR = compression ratio, equal to the slope of the virgin compression
portion of the ε-logσ ' plot as shown in Figure 2.6
Cc
=
1  e0
RR = recompression ratio, equal to the average slope of the
recompression portion of the ε-logσ ' plot as shown in Figure
2.6
Cr
= 1  e0
Cc = compression index which can be estimated from laboratory
oedometer tests
Cr = recompression index which can be estimated from laboratory
oedometer tests
e0 = initial void ratio of the layer 32
Secondary consolidation
Causes: Slippage and re-
orientation of soil particles
under constant effective
stresses. Compression of
secondary pore series
De
Ca 
t 
log  2 
 
t
 1 

De Ca H  t2 
S s  H c  H  log  
c
c  
1 ep 1 ep  t1 

Ca =secondary compression index


OC clays (OCR> 2 or 3): >0.001
Organic soils: >0.025
NC clays: 0.004 ~0.025
33
Immediate settlement analysis
based on elastic theory
 Calculate induced stress beneath foundation
Dsv and Dsh
 Find strain at depth z and integrate
1 Z
v 
E
(D s v  2D s h ) r   0
 v dz

 Settlement at the center of loaded area


R
r  Dqs Ir Circular footing
E
B
r  Dqs Ir (1  
2
) Square footing
E
Ir = influence coefficient

34
Plate load test
• The test is mainly used to derive the
deformation modulus of soil for predicting
the settlement of a shallow foundation.
• Guidelines and procedures for conducting
plate loading tests are given in BS EN
1997-1:2004 (BSI, 2004) and DD ENV
1997-3:2000 (BSI, 2000b).
• The elastic soil modulus Es can be
determined as:

qnet = net ground bearing pressure


δp = settlement of the test plate
Is = shape factor
b = diameter of test plate, 350, 450, or 600 mm
νs = Poisson’s ratio of the soil

35
Evaluation of immediate settlement based
on in-situ tests (Schmertmann’s method)
Most of the methods for sands are purely empirical. Schmertmann’s
method is based on elastic theory and calibrated using empirical
data. The total settlement is the sum of settlements of layers:
1 Dp
v  (D s v  D s h  D s l )  I
E Es
HI
r  C 1 C 2 C 3 ( q  s ' zD ) 

Es
H: layer thickness
I: influence factor at layer
Es: equivalent modulus of elasticity of layer (not Young’s modulus E)
C1, C2 and C3: correction factors for depth, creep and shape, respectively:
C1 =1-0.5s’zD/(q-s’zD)
C2 =1+0.2log(time in year/0.1)
C3 =1.03-0.03L/B > 0.73

36
Schmertmann’s method

Peak value of strain


influence factor

q  s zD
,
Square or
I p  0 .5  0 .1 circular
s zp
,

q=bearing pressure
s’zD=vertical effective stress
at depth D
s’zp=vertical effective stress Strip footing
at peak Ip

True
Bilinear simplification
37
Schmertmann’s method
Es value from CPT

Es value from SPT E s  0 OCR   1 N 60

(Kulhawy and Mayne 1990):

38
Schmertmann’s method: example
Rectangular footing 2.5 m x 30 m
DW=2.0 m
D=2.0 m
Load=375 kN/m x 30 m
=11250 kN
Es to be evaluated by CPT
Es=2.5 qc
Find d at t=0.1 and t=50 years

Spreadsheet Schmertmann
Depth of influence =D+4B=12 m
Answer: d =39.5 mm at t=0.1a
=60.8 mm at t=50 a
If da=50 mm, then B=2.92 m

39

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