ludvik
Structural
- Aug 6, 2001
- 75
I have recently been told that battered piles do not perform as well as straight piles under seismic conditions. Why is this?
The only justification that i have been able to find is that battered piles are stiffer laterally than straight piles and thus attract more load. They have greater lateral strength also obviously, so is there something else? Pretty much any foundation system that adds lateral strength will add lateral stiffness.
I have a bridge with very heavy superstructure and substructure that is crossing a swamp, and the top layer of soil will provide very little lateral support to the piles. Seismic will probably be the governing condition in the design, and battered piles seem to be the obvious answer.
Can any of you geotechnical experts shed any light on this for me?
Thanks,
Michael
The only justification that i have been able to find is that battered piles are stiffer laterally than straight piles and thus attract more load. They have greater lateral strength also obviously, so is there something else? Pretty much any foundation system that adds lateral strength will add lateral stiffness.
I have a bridge with very heavy superstructure and substructure that is crossing a swamp, and the top layer of soil will provide very little lateral support to the piles. Seismic will probably be the governing condition in the design, and battered piles seem to be the obvious answer.
Can any of you geotechnical experts shed any light on this for me?
Thanks,
Michael