iandig
Civil/Environmental
- Apr 10, 2003
- 212
I have been asked by a German Design and Build contractor to review and comment on their procedure for predicting the potential settlement due to desiccation. The site is in the UK and the underlying soil is a Glacial Till/Boulder Clay, LL 43-45, PL 17-19, PI 24-26.
The equation they have used for their calculations in Germany is based on a research paper known as 'Heft 152' which [based upon my translation of it] relates to issues with pipes and water pipes. The calcualtion of potential settlement is as follows:
s ~ 1/3 x {[(w1 – w2) x ?d/?w x h0 ]/ V0}
mit:
s Setzung [mm][Settlement]
Vo Volumen des Bodenkörpers (h0 x b x l) [m³] [Volume under consideration]
h0 Höhe der betrachteten Schicht [m] [Depth/height of layer]
wi Wassergehalte [%] [Water/moisture content]
?d Wichte des getrockneten Bodens [KN/m³] [Dry Unit Weight of soil]
?w Wichte des Wasser [KN/m³] [Unit Weight of Water]
The analysis assumes that any loss in water is directly related to a loss in volume, and as this can occur in three axis, it divides the answer by 3 to predict settlement. The way the units work and cancel out, it results in the change in moisture [as a %] x the depth of layer [in m] then divided by 3 to give an answer in mm.
The results provided by the German contractor predict very small settlements due to shrinkage, whcih are unrealistic for the soils we have in the UK, i.e. with a moisture change from 35% to 23%, it only predicts 6.4mm over 1.0m
My questions are:
1. Has anyone used this equation before?
2. Has anyone used similar equations to this?
3. Does anyone have an alternative method of calculating predicted settlement?
4. What are your thoughts on this approach?
The soil is proposed to be left in-situ below a floor slab which may [in about 15 to 20 yrs] be subject to desiccation due to the presence of trees outside of the site boundary. This is NOT in accordance with what the engineer wants, but because of their refusal to remove the material prior to now, the structural steelwork and cladding are already in place. Moisture contents within the soil at present are around 19 to 21% with a localised maximum moisutre of 24%, and the soil is an overconsolidated clay.
The equation they have used for their calculations in Germany is based on a research paper known as 'Heft 152' which [based upon my translation of it] relates to issues with pipes and water pipes. The calcualtion of potential settlement is as follows:
s ~ 1/3 x {[(w1 – w2) x ?d/?w x h0 ]/ V0}
mit:
s Setzung [mm][Settlement]
Vo Volumen des Bodenkörpers (h0 x b x l) [m³] [Volume under consideration]
h0 Höhe der betrachteten Schicht [m] [Depth/height of layer]
wi Wassergehalte [%] [Water/moisture content]
?d Wichte des getrockneten Bodens [KN/m³] [Dry Unit Weight of soil]
?w Wichte des Wasser [KN/m³] [Unit Weight of Water]
The analysis assumes that any loss in water is directly related to a loss in volume, and as this can occur in three axis, it divides the answer by 3 to predict settlement. The way the units work and cancel out, it results in the change in moisture [as a %] x the depth of layer [in m] then divided by 3 to give an answer in mm.
The results provided by the German contractor predict very small settlements due to shrinkage, whcih are unrealistic for the soils we have in the UK, i.e. with a moisture change from 35% to 23%, it only predicts 6.4mm over 1.0m
My questions are:
1. Has anyone used this equation before?
2. Has anyone used similar equations to this?
3. Does anyone have an alternative method of calculating predicted settlement?
4. What are your thoughts on this approach?
The soil is proposed to be left in-situ below a floor slab which may [in about 15 to 20 yrs] be subject to desiccation due to the presence of trees outside of the site boundary. This is NOT in accordance with what the engineer wants, but because of their refusal to remove the material prior to now, the structural steelwork and cladding are already in place. Moisture contents within the soil at present are around 19 to 21% with a localised maximum moisutre of 24%, and the soil is an overconsolidated clay.