geotechguy1
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 23, 2009
- 671
Hi all, couple of questions regarding bored cast in places pile. Thought I would ask here since I can't get a straight answer out of anyone as to why we specify certain things:
What concrete compressive strength needs to be used, and why? For instance, if I have a bunch of cast in place piles tied into a grade beam or pile cap for foundation, what is the purpose of specifying a 30 MPA or 35 MPA concrete? For a cast in place pile retaining wall, what is the purpose of specifying a 30 MPA concrete? The load on the pile is not remotely approaching that level, so I don't understand why I need to specify this high of strength, and why I should reject piles that only achieve 27 MPA in concrete testing?
The other thing I've noticed is that my firm always specifies that you can't drill adjacent piles (2m spacing typical) during the initial concrete set, therefore requiring the contractor to waste a bunch of time moving back and forth skipping piles. I cannot find any research that supports this requirement...in fact it seems that there is no statistically significant correlation, and in many cases experimental results show that drilling-induced or casing-induced vibration actually causes an increase in the compressive strength as often as it does a decrease in the compressive strength. (for instance this DoT research:
And in any case, even if the 'worst case' from this research was true, it only shows that on some occasions applying a continuos vibration greater than that caused by driving a casing within 2m for 30 minutes only leads to a ~7% reduction in strength (and as I mentinoed, it seems to sometimes lead to an increase in strength)...so in the worst case, my 30 MPA concrete is 27.6 MPA concrete, which seems irrelevant since no one can justify why we need 30 MPA concrete in the first place.
Anyway, I'm just wondering if anyone can provide an explanation for these requirements that is based on some factual evidence rather than "this is what we always specify".
What concrete compressive strength needs to be used, and why? For instance, if I have a bunch of cast in place piles tied into a grade beam or pile cap for foundation, what is the purpose of specifying a 30 MPA or 35 MPA concrete? For a cast in place pile retaining wall, what is the purpose of specifying a 30 MPA concrete? The load on the pile is not remotely approaching that level, so I don't understand why I need to specify this high of strength, and why I should reject piles that only achieve 27 MPA in concrete testing?
The other thing I've noticed is that my firm always specifies that you can't drill adjacent piles (2m spacing typical) during the initial concrete set, therefore requiring the contractor to waste a bunch of time moving back and forth skipping piles. I cannot find any research that supports this requirement...in fact it seems that there is no statistically significant correlation, and in many cases experimental results show that drilling-induced or casing-induced vibration actually causes an increase in the compressive strength as often as it does a decrease in the compressive strength. (for instance this DoT research:
And in any case, even if the 'worst case' from this research was true, it only shows that on some occasions applying a continuos vibration greater than that caused by driving a casing within 2m for 30 minutes only leads to a ~7% reduction in strength (and as I mentinoed, it seems to sometimes lead to an increase in strength)...so in the worst case, my 30 MPA concrete is 27.6 MPA concrete, which seems irrelevant since no one can justify why we need 30 MPA concrete in the first place.
Anyway, I'm just wondering if anyone can provide an explanation for these requirements that is based on some factual evidence rather than "this is what we always specify".