[ul]
[li]figure out your loads.[/li]
[li]Determine your soil properties with depth (i.e., unit weight, soil modulus, OCR, Cc, Cv, e)[/li]
[li]Apply them - it's like flipping the switch that's marked, "Gravity."[/li]
[li]Use elastic theory to determine the attenuation of loads with depth.[/li]
[li]Evaluate whether you are exceeding the stresses of preconsolidation - let's say you are not.[/li]
[li]Make a plot of layers, stresses and moduli with depth.[/li]
[li]Integrate the change in stress with respect to depth for each layer. Divide that area by the layer's modulus value.[/li]
[li]Get settlement out of that layer. That's immediate settlement![/li]
[li]Consider that an additional 30 to 50 percent of that value could develop in time - like over the next 20 or 50 years.[/li]
[li]Let the immediate settlement occur during construction and let the over-time settlement gauge what may happen during service life.[/li]
[/ul]
So, if you have a 10 ft layer that experiences a typical stress increase of 1,000 psf and has a modulus value of 200 tsf, that'd return 0.3 in of immediate settlement. And (likely) a trivial 0.1 in of settlement in the decades beyond.
f-d
ípapß gordo ainÆt no madre flaca!