Ajay_Shastri
Geotechnical
- Aug 30, 2017
- 2
I have been practicing for my PE exam and came across a problem which is throwing me off. The problem is to determine the allowable bearing capacity of a mat foundation 40ft x 80 ft with soil unit wt 120lb/ft^3 located 8ft below ground surface with SPT of the soil being 18. Sounds simple, so I use the N value to get the friction angle (~32°) and then go on to get the Terzaghi's bearing capacity factors for that and compute the bearing capacity turns out be 19.74 Te/ft^2 after applying a FOS of 2. The answer however turned out to be 2.49 Te/ft^2. The author (lindberg) used the formula for a FOS of 2 qa = 0.22*Cn*N, where Cn is the depth correction factor (~0.69). This was very puzzling because of the difference of magnitude. I was hoping somebody with more experience can explain why?
The 2nd part of my question comes after doing more research I realized that most of the bearing capacity equations based on N Value for such as Terzhaghi and Peck (as given in Boweles) qa = 0.720(N-3)*(B+1/2B)^2
or Meyerhof qa = N/4(B+1/B)^2*Kd (where Kd = 1+ 0.33D/B) are very counter-intuitive. It almost appears that the bearing capacity is reducing with width of the foundation. I am assuming this is because of stress concentration near the center leading to greater settlement and thereby a lower bearing capacity, Can somebody please confirm if this is correct?
The 2nd part of my question comes after doing more research I realized that most of the bearing capacity equations based on N Value for such as Terzhaghi and Peck (as given in Boweles) qa = 0.720(N-3)*(B+1/2B)^2
or Meyerhof qa = N/4(B+1/B)^2*Kd (where Kd = 1+ 0.33D/B) are very counter-intuitive. It almost appears that the bearing capacity is reducing with width of the foundation. I am assuming this is because of stress concentration near the center leading to greater settlement and thereby a lower bearing capacity, Can somebody please confirm if this is correct?