Hello All-
I am in the process of designing a modular block retaining wall that must be a gravity type wall - no geogrid. There is a road in front of the wall and the property line is immediately behind the wall. The wall is being placed to retain a cut in an existing bank so that a road can be built at the base of the wall. There is enough horizontal space between the rear of the wall and the property line for 1' to 2' of drainage stone. The existing slope above the wall is as steep as 2H:1V. The site soils are silty clays and the geotech gave me 1000 psf cohesion and 13 deg friction angle (phi). My question is - should all cohesion be ignored in the retained zone? This is what I encounter in my textbooks. I understand that over the long term clay soils (in theory) act like heavy liquids. Is this reasonable or overly conservative? If I only use 13 deg phi I can't get the design to "work" even though the wall is only 7' to 8' tall. Any help on a method to figure a long-term reduced cohesion or a method of analysis using c & phi would be appreciated.
I am in the process of designing a modular block retaining wall that must be a gravity type wall - no geogrid. There is a road in front of the wall and the property line is immediately behind the wall. The wall is being placed to retain a cut in an existing bank so that a road can be built at the base of the wall. There is enough horizontal space between the rear of the wall and the property line for 1' to 2' of drainage stone. The existing slope above the wall is as steep as 2H:1V. The site soils are silty clays and the geotech gave me 1000 psf cohesion and 13 deg friction angle (phi). My question is - should all cohesion be ignored in the retained zone? This is what I encounter in my textbooks. I understand that over the long term clay soils (in theory) act like heavy liquids. Is this reasonable or overly conservative? If I only use 13 deg phi I can't get the design to "work" even though the wall is only 7' to 8' tall. Any help on a method to figure a long-term reduced cohesion or a method of analysis using c & phi would be appreciated.