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Ko At Rest Factor

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SteynvW

Civil/Environmental
Joined
Feb 1, 2016
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108
Location
AU
Good Day

Something interesting came across my desk today, the geotechnical report of an existing building has a Ko factor (long term) of 1,2 for at-rest lateral soil pressure.
Is this not supposed to be a maximum of 1?

The site is underlain by clay, can the Ko factor be larger than 1 due to the swell of the clay?
 


Ko factor can be larger than 1.0 in case of overconsolidated clay.

The following para. copy and paste from Foundation Analysis and Design ( by Joseph E.Bowles)

(The upper limit of KoOCR appears to be the passive earth pressure coefficient Kp , and a number of values reported in the literature range from 1.5 to 1.7. It would appear that the upper limit of any normally consolidated soil would be KOjnc < 1.0 since a fluid such as water has K0 = 1.0 and no normally consolidated soil would have a value this large.

The suggested formula
KoOCR = Ko,nc X OCR^n

Ko could be in the range of 0.7 for normal consolidated clay but KoOCR could be larger than 1.0 depending upon the term OCR (overconsolidation ratio) and (n)..










Not to know is bad;
not to wish to know is worse.

NIGERIAN PROVERB
 
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