• Title/Summary/Keyword: Pile-up

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Numerical Analysis of Belled Shaft Foundation in Thick Pusan Clays (대심도 부산점토에 적용된 종저말뚝(Belled Shaft foundation)의 수치해석 연구)

  • Rao, K.G.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 2006.03a
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    • pp.530-535
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    • 2006
  • The Pusan clays are soft and thick deposits and in some places, they reach even up to 50-70m. So, the pile foundations are inevitable in almost all cases. But they are significantly expansive when the length of the pile reaches about 70m. In this study, a comprehensive parametric study has been carried out in order to reduce the pile length and number of piles required in turn the cost of the foundation for particular building. A belled shaft pile has been optimized for a typical soil profile using the PLAXIS (FEM code). These results have shown a new direction of the pile foundation in Pusan, Korea. The results including the variation of contact pressures at the bottom of the bell, optimization of the angle of the bell and height of the bell in terms of the diameter of the shaft. And also, the design curves have been generated so that they can be directly used for design of belled shaft foundations. However, the structural strength criterion is being checked in the concerned laboratory.

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The Response of a Single Pile and Pile Groups to Tunnelling Performed in Weathered Rock (풍화암에서 실시된 터널굴착으로 인한 단독말뚝 및 군말뚝의 거동)

  • Lee, Cheol Ju
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.32 no.5C
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    • pp.199-210
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    • 2012
  • The effects of tunnelling in weak weathered rock on the behaviour of a pre-existing single pile and pile groups ($3{\times}3$ and $5{\times}5$ pile groups) above a tunnel have been studied by carrying out three-dimensional (3D) elasto-plastic numerical analyses. Numerical modelling of such effects considers the response of the single pile and pile groups in terms of tunnelling-induced ground and pile settlement as well as changes of the shear transfer mechanism at the pile-soil interface due to tunnelling. Due to changes in the relative shear displacement between the pile and the soil at the pile-soil interface with tunnel advancement, the shear stresses and axial pile force distributions along the pile change drastically. Based on the computed results, upward shear stresses are induced up to about Z/L=0.775 from the pile top, while downward shear stresses are mobilised below Z/L=0.775, resulting in a reduction in the axial pile force distribution with depth equivalent to a net increase in the tensile force on the pile. A maximum tensile force of about $0.36P_a$ developed on the single pile solely due to tunnelling, where $P_a$ is the service axial pile loading prior to tunnelling. The degree of interface shear strength mobilisation at the pile-soil interface was found to be a key factor governing pile-soil-tunnelling interaction. Overall it has been found that the larger the number of piles, the greater is the effect of tunnelling on the piles in terms of pile settlement, while changes of the axial pile forces for the piles in the groups are smaller than for a single pile due to the shielding effect. The reduction of apparent allowable pile capacity due to tunnelling-induced pile head settlement was significant, in particular for piles inside the groups.

The Application of New Pile Driving Formulas (새로운 항타공식의 적용)

  • 조천환;이명환
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.17 no.5
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    • pp.157-164
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    • 2001
  • 말뚝의 항타공식(또는 동적공식)은 간단하고 품질관리를 수행할 수 있는 실용적인 방법으로 이용되어 왔지만 신뢰도는 가정조건의 문제점으로 인해 매우 낮은 것으로 평가되고 있다. 실제적으로 동적공식은 항타시스템 및 항타과정 측면에서 보면 근본적으로 문제가 있는데, 그간의 많은 연구들은 이러한 사실을 고려하지 않은 상태에서 이루어 졌다. 본 연구에서는 동적공식의 문제점에 대해 평가해 보고 이를 바탕으로 새로운 동적공식을 제안하였다. 그리고 현장에서 항타분석기로 실측된 항타시 및 항타후 시험자료를 이용하여 새로운 동적공식의 신뢰도와 적용성을 평가하였으며 그 결과 새로운 동적공식의 실용성을 확인할 수 있었다.

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Effects of pile geometry on bearing capacity of open-ended piles driven into sands

  • Kumara, Janaka J.;Kurashina, Takashi;Kikuchi, Yoshiaki
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.11 no.3
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    • pp.385-400
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    • 2016
  • Bearing capacity of open-ended piles depends largely on inner frictional resistance, which is influenced by the degree of soil plugging. While a fully-plugged open-ended pile produces a bearing capacity similar to a closed-ended pile, fully coring (or unplugged) pile produces a much smaller bearing capacity. In general, open-ended piles are driven under partially-plugged mode. The formation of soil plug may depend on many factors, including wall thickness at the pile tip (or inner pile diameter), sleeve height of the thickened wall at the pile tip and relative density. In this paper, we studied the effects of wall thickness at the pile base and sleeve height of the thickened wall at the pile tip on bearing capacity using laboratory model tests. The tests were conducted on a medium dense sandy ground. The model piles with different tip thicknesses and sleeve heights of thickened wall at the pile tip were tested. The results were also discussed using the incremental filling ratio and plug length ratio, which are generally used to describe the degree of soil plugging. The results showed that the bearing capacity increases with tip thickness. The bearing capacity of piles of smaller sleeve length (e.g., ${\leq}1D$; D is pile outer diameter) was found to be dependent on the sleeve length, while it is independent on the sleeve length of greater than a 1D length. We also found that the soil plug height is dependent on wall thickness at the pile base. The results on the incremental filling ratio revealed that the thinner walled piles produce higher degree of soil plugging at greater penetration depths. The results also revealed that the soil plug height is dependent on sleeve length of up to 2D length and independent beyond a 2D length. The piles of a smaller sleeve length (e.g., ${\leq}1D$) produce higher degree of soil plugging at shallow penetration depths while the piles of a larger sleeve length (e.g., ${\geq}2D$) produce higher degree of soil plugging at greater penetration depths.

AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY ON THE PRODUCTION OF HIGH-STRENGTH CONCRETE PILE IN SITE (현장생산용 고강도 콘크리트 파일에 관한 실험적 연구)

  • 박칠림;권영호;백명종;이상수;정도순
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1995.04a
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    • pp.183-188
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    • 1995
  • Up to date, high-strength concrete pile which is producing in factory sells in the market. But according to the site and the construction conditions, the system to produce high-strength concrete pile directly in site is utilized in advanced country. Such the production system is the technique phenomenon very disirable in the side of quality control in site and the construction schedule, the time and the cost saving. This study is a fundamental experiment including concrete mixing design, non-autoclave curing method and the optimum condition to produce high-strengh concrete pile in site. As results of this study, High-strength concrete pile in site which target strength is 400kg/ $\textrm{cm}^2$ is able to produce it with optimum curing ciondition(75$^{\circ}C$, 9hr)and mixing design.

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The response of a single pile to open face tunnelling (Open face 터널시공으로 인한 단독말뚝의 거동)

  • Lee, Cheol-Ju
    • Journal of Korean Tunnelling and Underground Space Association
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    • v.14 no.5
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    • pp.529-545
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    • 2012
  • Three-dimensional (3D) finite element analyses have been performed to study the behaviour of a single pile to open face tunnelling in stiff clay. Several key factors such as tunnelling-induced ground and pile settlement, and shear transfer mechanism have been studied in detail. Tunnelling resulted in the development of pile settlement larger than the Greenfield soil surface settlement. In addition, due to changes in the shear transfer between the pile and the soil next to the pile with tunnel advancement, axial force distributions along the pile change drastically. The apparent allowable pile capacity was reduced up to about 30% due to the development of tunnelling-induced pile head settlement. The skin friction on the pile was increased with tunnel advancement associated with the changes of soil stresses and ground deformation and hence axial pile force distribution was reduced. Maximum tunnelling-induced tensile force on the pile was about 21% of the designed pile capacity. The zone of influence on the pile behaviour in the longitudinal direction may be identified as ${\pm}1$-2D (D: tunnel diameter) from the pile centre (behind and ahead of the pile axis in the longitudinal direction) based on the analysis conditions assumed in the current study. Negative excess pore pressure was mobilised near the pile tip, while positive excess pore pressure was computed at the upper part of the pile. It has been found that the serviceability of a pile experiencing adjacent tunnelling is more affected by pile settlement than axial pile force changes.

Strength and Friction Behavior of Cement paste poured in the Bored Pile (매입말뚝의 시멘트풀 강도 및 마찰거동에 관한 연구)

  • Park, Jong-Bae
    • Journal of the Korean GEO-environmental Society
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    • v.5 no.3
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    • pp.31-39
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    • 2004
  • The bored pile is widely used as a low noise and vibration piling method in Korea. However, there is design tendency to minimize the friction capacity of the bored pile because of uncertainty and the quality control specification is not set up. This research analysed the strength characteristics of cement paste after the uniaxial compression test with various condition. Test results show that the compressive strength of cement paste with w/c=0.83 was up to $156.0kgf/cm^2$, and the lower w/c ratio and the longer age, the strength of cement paste increased. Also the higher soil mixing ratio, the strength of soil cement decreased, and too high soil mixing ratio caused the malfuction of soil cement. Also this research analysed the 188 dynamic pile test results which were performed before and after hardening of cement paste. Analysis result showed that the average ultimate unit friction capacity was $9.1tf/m^2$ and this result surpassed the common design criteria of the bored pile.

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MODELING OF INTERACTION LAYER GROWTH BETWEEN U-Mo PARTICLES AND AN Al MATRIX

  • Kim, Yeon Soo;Hofman, G.L.;Ryu, Ho Jin;Park, Jong Man;Robinson, A.B.;Wachs, D.M.
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.45 no.7
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    • pp.827-838
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    • 2013
  • Interaction layer growth between U-Mo alloy fuel particles and Al in a dispersion fuel is a concern due to the volume expansion and other unfavorable irradiation behavior of the interaction product. To reduce interaction layer (IL) growth, a small amount of Si is added to the Al. As a result, IL growth is affected by the Si content in the Al matrix. In order to predict IL growth during fabrication and irradiation, empirical models were developed. For IL growth prediction during fabrication and any follow-on heating process before irradiation, out-of-pile heating test data were used to develop kinetic correlations. Two out-of-pile correlations, one for the pure Al matrix and the other for the Al matrix with Si addition, respectively, were developed, which are Arrhenius equations that include temperature and time. For IL growth predictions during irradiation, the out-of-pile correlations were modified to include a fission-rate term to consider fission enhanced diffusion, and multiplication factors to incorporate the Si addition effect and the effect of the Mo content. The in-pile correlation is applicable for a pure Al matrix and an Al matrix with the Si content up to 8 wt%, for fuel temperatures up to $200^{\circ}C$, and for Mo content in the range of 6 - 10wt%. In order to cover these ranges, in-pile data were included in modeling from various tests, such as the US RERTR-4, -5, -6, -7 and -9 tests and Korea's KOMO-4 test, that were designed to systematically examine the effects of the fission rate, temperature, Si content in Al matrix, and Mo content in U-Mo particles. A model converting the IL thickness to the IL volume fraction in the meat was also developed.

Field investigation and numerical study of ground movement due to pipe pile wall installation in reclaimed land

  • Hu Lu;Rui-Wang Yu;Chao Shi;Wei-Wei Pei
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.397-408
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    • 2023
  • Pipe pile walls are commonly used as retaining structures for excavation projects, particularly in densely populated coastal cities such as Hong Kong. Pipe pile walls are preferred in reclaimed land due to their cost-effectiveness and convenience for installation. However, the pre-bored piling techniques used to install pipe piles can cause significant ground disturbance, posing risks to nearby sensitive structures. This study reports a well-documented case history in a reclamation site, and it was found that pipe piling could induce ground settlement of up to 100 mm. Statutory design submissions in Hong Kong typically specify a ground settlement alarm level of 10 mm, which is significantly lower than the actual settlement observed in this study. In addition, lateral soil movement of approximately 70 mm was detected in the marine deposit. The lateral soil displacement in the marine deposit was found to be up to 3.4 and 3.1 times that of sand fill and CDG, respectively, mainly due to the relatively low stiffness of the marine deposit. Based on the monitoring data and site-investigation data, a 3D numerical analysis was established to back-analyze soil movements due to the installation of the pipe pile wall. The comparison between measured and computed results indicates that the equivalent ground loss ratio is 20%, 40%, and 20% for the fill, marine deposit and CDG, respectively. The maximum ground settlement increases with an increase in the ground loss ratio of the marine deposit, whereas the associated influence radius remains stationary at 1.2 times the pipe pile wall depth (H). The maximum ground settlement increases rapidly when the thickness of marine deposit is less than 0.32H, particularly for the ground loss ratio of larger than 40%. This study provides new insights into the pipe piling construction in reclamation sites.

Evaluation of Pile Bearing Capacity and Scale Effect Using Model Pile Test (모형실험을 통한 말뚝지지력의 평가 및 치수효과의 비교분석)

  • 이인모;이정학
    • Geotechnical Engineering
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.37-44
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    • 1993
  • Model pile tests in calibration chamber are performed in order to study the two factors that the pile bearing capacity is significantly influenced by. Those factors are the critical depth concept and the scale effect caused by pile diameters. Firstly, the predicted values of end bearing capacity from the various static formulae were compared with the measured ones from model pile tests. Secondly, the critical depth concept and the scale effect were investigated by using two different soil conditions in a series of calibration chamber tests : the one is uniform sand : and the other is weathered granites overlayered by sand. Main results obtained from the model tests can be summarized as follows : (1) The end bearing capacity was increased with pile penetration depth up to penetration ratio of 7 to 8 when the cell pressure is high, and the critical depth was observed in the current chamber tests with uniform sand layer , (2) The predicted end bearing capacities were mostly lager than the measured, and it was found that the differences between the predicted and the measured values became smaller as the pile penetration ratio was increased : (3) The end bearing capacity of the small diameter pile in weathered granites layer was mostly less than that of the larger pile, while in uniform sand layer it was vice.

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