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13. SETTLEMENT OF STRUCTURES 13.1 Solutions based on the theory of elasticity Figure 1 represents a surface footing resting on a soil layer of depth H. P
Soil Layer
Rigid bedrock
Fig. 1 Foundation resting on a soil layer Fig. 1 Foundation resting on a soil layer The settlement, s, of any point can be determined from s =
H 0
zz dz
(1a)
As discussed earlier, to determine the settlement immediately after the application of the load equation (1c) is used, and to determine the long term or drained settlement equation (1b) is used. In the latter case the changes in pore water pressure u are usually zero and so the increment in effective stress is equal to the increment in total stress. Thus, in both cases the settlement can be calculated if both the change in total vertical stress zz and the change in the mean total stress (xx+ yy+ zz ) are known. It has been shown previously how the Boussinesq solution for the stresses in an elastic half space due to a point load acting on the surface can be used to determine the stress distributions under a
variety of shapes of loaded areas (circles, rectangles, arbitrary shapes). The same solution can be used to determine the surface settlements, sr as a function of the distance, r, from a point load Q, as sr (2) This is illustrated in Figure 2. = Q(1 2 ) Er
Q r sr
sr
Q(1 2 ) Er
Fig. 2 Surface Surface deflection of aload onelastic elastic layer Fig. 2 deflection due to a point deep a deep layer Because the soil is assumed to be linear elastic it is possible to use superposition to determine the surface settlements for distributed loads using the point load solution. For example, the settlement at the centre of a circular loaded area, radius, a, with uniform stress, q, (flexible foundation), can be determined by considering the effect of the stress, q, acting over an area r d dr (shown in Figure 3) on the settlement at the centre. The settlement is then given by:
dr
d d
r
scentre
= =
a 2 0 0
(1 2 ) qrddr Er 2q (1 2 )a E
(3) For other positions under the circular load and for other shapes the integration is not so straightforward, and in many cases analytical solutions will not be possible. Also a limitation of this (Boussinesq) solution is that it assumes the soil layer is infinitely deep. This rarely occurs in practice as more generally a relatively shallow soil layer usually overlies rock. The procedure adopted in practice is to make use of charted solutions that are available for a number of commonly encountered situations. Some of these are given in the data sheets, and are discussed below. For other solutions the book "Elastic solutions for Soil and Rock Mechanics" by Poulos and Davis should be referred to. 13.2 Settlement under a rigid circular load
P = a 2 p av
Rigid bedrock
Fig. 4a Rigid circular footing on an elastic layer on a rigid base The configuration being considered is shown in Figure 4a and the solution is presented in terms of a settlement factor, I. The settlement, s, is given by the expression:
s = (4) where
p av a I E
Pav is the average stress on the footing = Load/Area = P/(a2) a is the radius of the loaded area
E is the soil modulus I is a settlement factor read from Figure 4b (Data Sheets page 45). Note that I depends on the value of Poissons ratio .
1.6
P = a 2 p av
1.2 2a h
= 0.0 0.2
0.8
0.4 0.5
s = p av a I E
0.4
0.0 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 h/a a/h
Fig. 4b Settlement factors for a rigid circular footing on a soil layer Fig. 3b Settlement Factor for rigid circular footing on a layer Example
Determine the final settlement under a footing 3 m in diameter which is subjected to a load of 500 kN if it rests on a soil layer 9 m thick with properties E' = 5 MPa, v' = 0.3.
a h I p av s = = = = . 15 9 . 122 500 . (15) 2 . . 70.7 15 122 5000 = = = .167 from figure(4 b) 70.7 kPa 0.026m
The settlement under a square footing can be estimated to sufficient accuracy by considering the load to act over an equivalent circular area. So if the square footing has sides of length b the following equivalent pressure and radius can be used in equation 4: p av a = = P b2 b
Soils often have a modulus that increases with depth. The soil does not necessarily change its nature with depth, the reason for the increase in modulus is that the mean effective stress increases with depth and, because the modulus increases with the mean effective stress so the modulus varies
with depth. Often the variation with depth is approximately linear and so can be approximated by the relation: E = E 0 + mz (5) The modulus increases linearly from E0 at the surface as shown schematically in Figure 5.. P = a 2 p av p
2a
E 0 + mz
Fig. 5 Circular footing on non-homogeneous soil Fig. 4 Circular footing on a non-homogeneous soil A charted solution is available for this modulus variation for the case of a flexible circular footing (p constant) resting on an infinitely deep soil layer. The settlement may be expressed in the form: p a s = I E0 (6) where I is the influence factor given in Figure 6 (Data Sheets p 47) and p is the stress on the footing a is the radius of the loaded area E0 is the Young's modulus at the surface
10--1
10--4 10---4
Example
10---2
E0 ma
102
An oil tank applies a uniform stress of 75 kPa over a circular area with diameter 20 m. Calculate the immediate settlement if the undrained modulus increases linearly from 2 MPa at the surface, to 5 MPa at 10 m.
E 5 = = E 0 + mz 2 + 10m
m = 0.3 MPa / m
= = now I thus s = = pa I E0 75 10 0.6 2000 0.6 from fig. 6 E0 ma 2 0.3 10
0.67
0.225m
13.5 Settlement under the edge of a flexible strip load on a finite soil layer
The configuration is shown in Figure 7a. The settlement at the edge takes the form:
s = (7)
p h E
where I is the influence factor given in Figure 7b (Data sheets p 46) and p is the stress on the strip footing h is the depth of the soil layer E is the Young's modulus of the soil. The value of the settlement at other locations can be found by superposition, as demonstrated below. For a rigid strip footing the settlement can be estimated by averaging the centre and edge settlements of an equivalent flexible footing.
p
B h S o il L a y e r
R ig id b e d ro c k
0.0
Fig. 7b Settlement factor for edge of flexible strip on a soil layer Example
Determine the final settlement at a point 10 m from the centre of a 16 m wide embankment, assuming that the embankment can be considered as a flexible strip load which applies a surface stress of 50 kPa. The embankment is constructed on a soil layer 15m deep with the properties E= 9 MPa, = 0.3. Because of the assumption of elasticity superposition can be used. Thus the embankment loading can be simulated as shown in Figure 8.
8m 10m 18m 2m
Embankment
(+) (-)
15m
2m
The embankment loading consists of a strip loading of intensity +50 kPa and width of 18 m for which:
10
h B
15 18
and a strip loading of intensity -50 kPa and width of 2 m for which:
B h = 2 15
E ph I E
11
If a footing is embedded the settlement will be reduced. Two cases are shown in Figure 9a for which some solutions are available, both for a very deep elastic layer. The settlement reduction factors are given in Figure 9b (Data sheets p 48). To use these solutions the settlement must be found using the previously derived solutions for the load resting on the surface.
1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0 5 10 Z/D = 0.50 (b) 15 20 = = = = 0.49 (a) 0.49 (a) 0.25 (a) 0.25 (a)
12
This component is due to deformations in the soil immediately after loading. As has been discussed previously, immediately after load is applied water has no time to drain out of the voids and so there is no volume change. Hence any deformation must occur at constant volume. In practice deformation at constant volume only occurs for relatively impermeable clayey soils that remain undrained in the short term. To estimate the initial settlement, si, due to the constant volume deformation the undrained (total stress) parameters Eu, u = 1/2 are used in the analyses described above. As observed earlier when the load is applied over a very large area the situation approaches onedimensional conditions, for which the initial undrained settlement is zero. In principle effective stress parameters could be used to determine the settlement, but because the excess pore pressures generated by the load vary throughout the soil the analysis is not straightforward, and the simple elastic formulae cannot be used.
13.7.2 Consolidation Settlement
This is due to deformations arising from volume changes which occur as a consequence of the excess pore water pressures, which have been generated immediately after loading, dissipating allowing the effective stresses to come into equilibrium with the applied loads. Finally all excess pore water pressures will have dissipated and the final settlement, stf, can be determined by using E', v' in the settlement formulae developed previously. The settlement due to consolidation, sc, can be determined indirectly from the final settlement stf, and the immediate settlement, si, by:
sc (8)
= s tf si
Settlements due to creep cannot be predicted using the simple elastic formulae, and are usually only significant for soft soil sites.
13.8 Calculation of the settlement at any time
For relatively impermeable clayey soils, in the short term undrained deformations occur. It is normally assumed that construction occurs sufficiently quickly so that no drainage occurs, and the settlement at the end of construction is then the immediate settlement si. For sandy soils, the total final settlement is reached in the short term and there is no time dependent response, thus it is assumed that consolidation is instantaneous. Note that there will be soils that have intermediate properties, and the initial settlement will be partly drained. The extent of the drainage (consolidation) will depend on the boundary conditions and the coefficient of consolidation. For clayey soils the time settlement behaviour can be visualised as shown in Figure 10
13
Load
Construction time
The settlement at any time t can then be calculated from the three components described above and it is found that:
st
= si + Usc
(9a)
where U is called the degree of consolidation U = clearly U = and U = 1 when t = 0 when t = 0 s t si sTf si (9b)
Solutions for U versus T for a variety of boundary conditions are given in the Data Sheets, pages 50 - 58. In general these charts use the non-dimensionalised time factor T given by cv t / h2, where h is the thickness of the soil layer irrespective of the boundary conditions (Note that this is different from the definition used for 1-D consolidation). Solutions are given for the following boundary conditions:
PTPB PTIB IFIB
Permeable base, permeable top boundary and permeable footing. Impermeable base, permeable top boundary and permeable footing. Impermeable base, permeable top boundary and impermeable footing.
14
IFPB Example
Determine the immediate settlement, the final settlement, and the settlement 1 year after the end of construction of a rigid circular footing 5 m in diameter which supports a load of 1.5 MN, and is founded on a 5 m thick clay layer overlying gravel. The clay layer has the following uniform properties: E' = 5 MPa, v' = 0.2, cv = 0.5 m2/yr and Eu = 6.25 MPa.
Step 1 Calculation of the Initial Settlement
= 19.25 mm
15
sTf
= =
Step 3 Calculation of Settlement after 1 year (a) For the case of an Impermeable footing (IFPB)
The consolidation settlement sc = (36.29-19.25) mm= 17 mm The degree of consolidation can be determined from Figure 11, thus for:
T = c v t / h2
= 0.5 1 / 52
= 0.02
h/a = 2
10-5
10-4
10-3 T =
10-2 cvt h2
10-1
16
0.0 0.2 0.4 U 0.6 h/a=50 0.8 1.0 10-4 10-3 T = 10-2 cvt h2 10-1 1 20 10 5 1 0 0.5 2
The degree of consolidation can be determined from Figure 12, and it is found that U=0.5 and so the settlement after 1 year is: s1 yr = 19.25 + 0.50 17 = 27.75 mm