Babak1977 - For starters, I agree completely with Hokie66, JedClampett, and Jayrod12. But let's not go there, take a look at another aspect of the project:
Babak1977 said:
Constructing piles under the floor is very expensive because the floor elevation code is 0.6 m.a.s.l., NGL is near the sea level and it's fully saturated, and the ground is nearly muddy, using piles will not help in such situation, only remained method is soil improvement...
I have to disagree with you, an adequate number of piling are probably the only cost effective solution. I have spent a career working on various aspects of the design, construction, and (most importantly) the multi-year follow-up of the structural performance of heavy industrial projects (electric utility power stations, 500 megawatt class) with exactly the soil conditions you describe.
From your statement, I assume the tank / foundation is almost completely above the water table - all load, for the entire tank & its contents will be carried by the piling under the wall - no buoyancy from foundations submerged in ground water.
The 80 meter by 40 meter tank has a perimeter of 240 meters. Let's say that one row of nominal 400 mm concrete piling are used under the wall.
Minimum pile spacing is normally considered to be 3 pile diameters (or three times the length of one side, for square piling). Therefore, typical pile spacing is no less than 1.2 meters, for a maximum of 200 each, 400 mm piling to support everything (walls, floor, tank contents, piping, etc.) You could put a footing under the wall and get more than one row of perimeter piling, but that makes things more complicated. If my 400 mm assumption of pile size is wrong, it does not really matter. There could be more smaller piling, but less allowable load per pile. Larger piles, more load but fewer piling.
You have not mentioned the depth of the tank so I can't make a meaningful guess at the load per pile, but the 500 mm thick floor alone is over 18,000 kilograms / pile. That by itself, is a lot for a 400 mm pile in poor soils. Have you calculated an average pile loading value that includes the walls and tank contents, also?
How long are the piling? Because of the soil conditions, the piling are certainly not going to rely on friction for bearing anywhere close to the ground surface. Are the piling point bearing instead? How far down? The poor soils are worthless for providing lateral support to the piling. Piling with heavy loads and long, laterally unsupported length = failure by buckling under load.
Just some things to think about, that could be unintended consequences of not having an adequate
number of piling.
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