Title: Settlement Analysis
1Settlement Analysis
- D. A. Cameron
- Rock and Soil Mechanics, 2006
2COMPONENTS
- Elastic or immediate settlement
- Consolidation
- slow draining, saturated soils
- Creep or secondary consolidation
3Elastic or Immediate Settlement
- The elastic settlement due to a surface load is
-
-
where ?z vertical strain
4Strains from -
- Stress distribution due to surface load
- Soil profile
- Youngs modulus, E, Poissons ratio, ?, for the
soils
Apply Hookes Law to evaluate strains
5q
??z/q
??r /q
DEPTH
6Elastic Soil Parameters
- Saturated NC clays, short term loading?
- Eu and ?u
- - ?u 0.5
- By definition, cant be any volume change
-
7Typical values of the elastic constants
8Solutions for a homogeneous soil of semi-infinite
depth
- where q udl (kPa)
- B width of loaded area (m)
- Is Settlement Influence Factor
- and s settlement in (mm)
9Settlement influence factors
10Consider.
- Settlement of rigid footings?
- Settlement of corners of rectangles?
- as for stress distribution, an extremely useful
solution - geometric superposition!
- Influence of limited soil depth? Finite layer
- superposition allows treatment of soil profile
11Real Footings?
- Flexible footings - uniform contact stress
- ideal for theoretical treatment
- Rigid small but thick footings
- no differential settlement
- settlement ? 0.8(scentre-flexible) ? smean
- In-between stiffnesses (real footings)
- corrections for rigidity, relative to soil
stiffness
12Solutions for a homogeneous soil of finite depth,
h
- Ueshita and Meyerhofs charts (1968) corner of
a uniformly loaded, flexible rectangle,
semi-infinite soil ? L/B gt 1
13Ueshita and Meyerhof
Irc tabulated in notes as follows
14Ueshita and Meyerhof, ? 0.5
15Ueshita and Meyerhof, ? 0.3
16Corners of Rectangles
GEOMETRIC SUPERPOSITION to get settlements below
any point e.g. point A 3 rectangles
A
Rectangles must meet at a common corner
17FINITE LAYER SUPERPOSITION
Irc1
Rigid Base
Irc2
18General Solution, for ? constant
19Example
- Check the differential settlement of a 10 x 20 m
floor, carrying a udl of just 80 kPa, assuming
the floor to be flexible - The soil profile consists of clays, the first
layer being 4 m thick while the second layer is 8
m thick. Rock thereafter. The clay near the
surface has an undrained shear strength of 30
kPa, while the lower layer is much stiffer - 100
kPa. - The stiffness of either soil may be approximated
by 300cU.
20Solution Centre
- 4 rectangles 5 x 10 m
- ? B 5 LB 2
- Layer 1 depth 4 m
- hB 0.8 ?Irc 0.066 Eu 9 MPa
- Layer 2 depth 12 m
- hB 2.4 ?Irc 0.252 Eu 30 MPa
- sct 4x80x5 (0.066/9 (0.252 - 0.066)/30)
- sct 1600 (0.0073 0.0062) 11.7 9.9 mm
21Solution Corner
- 1 rectangles 10 x 20 m
- ? B 10 LB 2
- Layer 1 depth 4 m
- hB 0.4 ?Irc 0.022 Eu 9 MPa
- Layer 2 depth 12 m
- hB 1.2 ?Irc 0.118 Eu 30 MPa
- scnr 80x10 (0.022/9 (0.118 - 0.022)/30)
- scnr 800 (0.0024 0.0032) 1.9 2.6 mm
22ANSWER
- Centre 21.6 mm
- Corner 4.5 mm
- Differential 17.1 mm
- Should check mid-sides too
- B 10 m and LB 1
- B 5 m and LB 4
23Validity of Elastic Solutions
- Limited by Boussinesq theory
- Chiefly
- ??z underestimated when soil is underlain by a
rigid boundary - ??z overestimated when a stiff soil layer
overlies a less stiff soil
241. Vertical stress distribution boundary
?z / ?z Boussinesq
Soil, E
z / H
H
ROCK
252. Vertical stress distribution layered soil
?z
Soil 1, E1
Soil 2, E2
26Part II. Settlements on Sands a special case
- Theoretical settlements of sands inadequate
- E increases rapidly with z in a uniform deposit,
- due to increasing confinement
- ? settlement estimates usually based on
- stiffness data from field tests
- empirical or semi-empirical settlement equations
27FIELD TESTS
- SPT, Standard Penetration Test
- Dynamic, disturbed soil sample, blowcount
- N no. of blows per 300 mm of penetration
- Corrections to N
- Unreliability worn equipment, operators
- BUT robust
- Density of sands
- Average settlement of footings
28SPT Device http//www.archway-engineering.com/prod
ucts/spt_sampler.html
Automatic trip hammer
Split spoon sampler
29Field Tests, continued
- CPT, Cone Penetration Test
- Less robust, much faster
- No soil sample
- Much information
- penetration resistance, qc and fs
- FR fs/qc used to distinguish soil types
- Piling applications
- E fn (qc)
30CPT
31Typical Results
32Interpretation
Robertson Campanella 1982
33Field Tests, continued
- Downhole Screw Plate
- Helical plate (dia. ? 150 mm) attached to rods
- Screwed below borehole pushed to fail soil
- Mini-plate loading test
- Soil strength and stiffness
34Field Tests, continued
- Marchetti Dilatometer
- Spade like device
- Pushed into soil to required depth
- Pressurized, expanded circular membrane
- Soil stiffness
- Earth pressure coefficient at rest
35Marchetti Dilatometer http//www.marchetti-dmt.it/
36Field Tests
- Self-Boring Pressuremeter (SBP)
- cylindrical device
- theoretically superior to dilatometer
- MUCH soil information
- http//www.cambridge-insitu.com/specs/Instruments/
LCPM_Spec.html
37http//www.cambridge-insitu.com/specs/Instruments/
LCPM_Spec.html
38Semi-Empirical Approach to Settlement in Sands
- The field tests provide variations of soil
stiffness - Schmertmann proposed using a STRAIN INFLUENCE
FACTOR, based initially on elastic theory of
stress distributions beneath a circle - Then modified for experimental behaviour
39STRAIN INFLUENCE FACTOR for stress beneath
centre of a flexible circle, with udl
GF geometric factor
40STRAIN INFLUENCE FACTOR
K ratio of horizontal to vertical stress
41Strain Influence Factor - circle, radius R
I?
0.2
0.6
0.8
0.4
0
Theory ? 0.4
1
Theory ? 0.5
z / R
2
3
4
42Schmertmann Approach
- Find strains and therefore settlements in layers
throughout the soil profile - Correct for creep
- Restricted to flexible circular footings
- equivalent circles?
- Central settlement only
- Kay and Cavagnaro developed I? for sides
43END NOTE
- Schmertmann developed his approach further to
account for footing shape which influenced - E - qc relationship
- I? distribution
44Kay and Cavagnaro Approach
- Kay and Cavagnaro (1983) applied the theoretical
I? distributions for estimation of differential
settlement on stiff Adelaide clays - I? for centre and side of circle
- could apply to rectangles up to LB ? 2
- requires radius, a, of equivalent area
- correction of diff. settlement for relative
rigidity of footing after P T Brown
45Kay and Cavagnaro - Centre
I?
1
2
3
4
0.5
1.0
0.0
?
46Kay and Cavagnaro - Corner
I?
1
2
3
4
0.5
1.0
0.0
?
47100 kPa Diameter 9 m
I?
1
2
3
4
0.5
1.0
0.0
? 30.4 mm
48Variation with Poissons ratio
49Part III. Stress Path Testing
- Triaxial testing
- Not to fail the soil, but to apply the stress
and drainage paths expected in the soil and
determine precisely the soil response
50Stress Path Testing
- Potentially most accurate method to evaluate
consolidation and immediate settlement - Dependence of E on stress level accommodated
- Numerous tests on different samples to find
strains in soil profile - Testing peculiar to the design problem
51Example
- Oil Tank differential settlement?
- 40 m diameter
- Surface pressure, 263 kPa
- 4 layered soil, soft sediments
- Top layer quite weak
- ?' 5 kPa
- Ko 0.4
52(No Transcript)
53Testing Procedure
- Obtain good quality samples
- Estimate effective soil stress at point in soil
- Apply as total stress in triaxial cell with
drains closed - anisotropic stress state?
- Open drains, allow consolidation
- at equilibrium, soil at field condition
- Close drains, apply extra stresses
- measure immediate settlement
- Open drains
- measure consolidation settlement
5450 kPa
20 kPa
u gt 0
After drainage ?' ?
No drainage
Anisotropic consolidation Getting the soil back
to its field condition
5550 250 kPa
si
20 140 kPa
u gt 0
After drainage ?' ?
No drainage - no volume change
Influence of Tank Loading Immediate and
Consolidation Settlement
56Stress Path
Black total stress pathBlue effective stress
path
3
undrained
t (?1 - ?3)/2
1
2
25
Field State
s' (?'1 ?'3)/2
57NOTES on stress path testing
- Unlike shear strength testing, the soil is not
taken to failure - Major limitation a relatively minor shift in the
design of the structure may invalidate the
settlement predictions
58Part IV. CREEP
- Sands (Schmertmann)
- Silts and Clays?
59The Creep Factor
60THE KEY POINTS
- Three types of settlement
- Elastic stress distribution solutions limited
- Settlement under corner of a rectangle on a
finite layer - geometric superposition
- layer superposition
- Sands need field evaluation of E with depth
- strongly dependent on stress state
- may need semi-empirical solution
61Summary, contd.
- Stress path method
- many samples
- complex testing
- anisotropic consolidation
- pore pressure monitoring
- accurate, IF samples are good
- too dependent on design parameters
- Numerical methods?