connect2
Structural
- Dec 24, 2003
- 306
Help me here if possible, cantilever retaining walls;
Ok so I can visualize active pressure acting on a wall. displacemant, rotation, or deflection of the wall
I can visualize at-rest pressure on a basement wall.
I can visualize passive pressure on the low side of a retaining wall and it's contribution to sliding and overturning stability when driven by the active pressure on the opposite side of the wall, if you want to use it.
But I can't visualize passive pressure acting in any other instance.
In any of the pseudostatic seismic analaysis methods, such as the M-O method and all its short comings, how is it possible that the wall can move towards the fill and a passive pressure result?
Would not the same movement causing the wall to be 'pushed' into the fill also move the fill in the same direction as well?
So where or how does passive pressure come into play in the seismic design of a retaining wall?
Thanks.
Ok so I can visualize active pressure acting on a wall. displacemant, rotation, or deflection of the wall
I can visualize at-rest pressure on a basement wall.
I can visualize passive pressure on the low side of a retaining wall and it's contribution to sliding and overturning stability when driven by the active pressure on the opposite side of the wall, if you want to use it.
But I can't visualize passive pressure acting in any other instance.
In any of the pseudostatic seismic analaysis methods, such as the M-O method and all its short comings, how is it possible that the wall can move towards the fill and a passive pressure result?
Would not the same movement causing the wall to be 'pushed' into the fill also move the fill in the same direction as well?
So where or how does passive pressure come into play in the seismic design of a retaining wall?
Thanks.