JamesDavey02
Structural
- Jan 27, 2012
- 2
I am currently in the process of designing a number of steel cased bottom driven piles, for Axial Loads of up to 500kN (@273mm diamter) and 350kN (@220mm diameter). The piles will be driven through alluvial silts (SPT N values 0-1), through a medium dense layer of sand at 18m, before end bearing in lower mudstone. I am reasonable happy that the piles can resist the axial loads, albeit with the use of 40N concrete.
My concern is that the piles will fail in buckling, I have calculated the critical buckling load using the Euler formula for piles with a fixed head, and pinned at the base (2.04*PI2*E*I/L2)using 35N concrete, and a 100year residual thickness of the casing of 1.0mm. The calcuated loads are a long way short of the design ultimate load of the piles(f.o.s of 3.0).
How do I calculate the area of reinforcement required to resist the bending moments induced within the pile as a result of buckling, in order to specify re-bar and links? Although my current thoughts are that their may be insufficient space within 220/273mm diameter casings to fit sufficient reinforcement!
All help appreciated!!
James
My concern is that the piles will fail in buckling, I have calculated the critical buckling load using the Euler formula for piles with a fixed head, and pinned at the base (2.04*PI2*E*I/L2)using 35N concrete, and a 100year residual thickness of the casing of 1.0mm. The calcuated loads are a long way short of the design ultimate load of the piles(f.o.s of 3.0).
How do I calculate the area of reinforcement required to resist the bending moments induced within the pile as a result of buckling, in order to specify re-bar and links? Although my current thoughts are that their may be insufficient space within 220/273mm diameter casings to fit sufficient reinforcement!
All help appreciated!!
James