DCBII
Structural
- Apr 15, 2010
- 187
Every cantilevered retaining wall example problem I can find seems to use a horizontal backfill and Rankine theory. I'm trying to get a better understanding of retaining wall design using Coulomb theory. I have a few questions.
All the textbook derivations of Coulomb theory I've seen show the soil failure wedge against a sloped wall (one with a "rake angle") with no heel (and thus no "vertical back"). How does the heel influence the shape of the failure wedge when I'm checking overturning? Do I assume the "vertical back" is one of the failure wedge planes, rather than the wall itself? How does this affect the value of delta (friction angle)? What should I be using for delta?
How does the wall slope ("rake angle") affect overturning calculations on a wall with a heel?
Thanks.
All the textbook derivations of Coulomb theory I've seen show the soil failure wedge against a sloped wall (one with a "rake angle") with no heel (and thus no "vertical back"). How does the heel influence the shape of the failure wedge when I'm checking overturning? Do I assume the "vertical back" is one of the failure wedge planes, rather than the wall itself? How does this affect the value of delta (friction angle)? What should I be using for delta?
How does the wall slope ("rake angle") affect overturning calculations on a wall with a heel?
Thanks.