• Title/Summary/Keyword: skin-friction

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A new design chart for estimating friction angle between soil and pile materials

  • Aksoy, Huseyin Suha;Gor, Mesut;Inal, Esen
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.10 no.3
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    • pp.315-324
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    • 2016
  • Frictional forces between soil and structural elements are of vital importance for the foundation engineering. Although numerous studies were performed about the soil-structure interaction in recent years, the approximate relations proposed in the first half of the 20th century are still used to determine the frictional forces. Throughout history, wood was often used as friction piles. Steel has started to be used in the last century. Today, alternatively these materials, FRP (fiber-reinforced polymer) piles are used extensively due to they can serve for long years under harsh environmental conditions. In this study, various ratios of low plasticity clays (CL) were added to the sand soil and compacted to standard Proctor density. Thus, soils with various internal friction angles (${\phi}$) were obtained. The skin friction angles (${\delta}$) of these soils with FRP, which is a composite material, steel (st37) and wood (pine) were determined by performing interface shear tests (IST). Based on the data obtained from the test results, a chart was proposed, which engineers can use in pile design. By means of this chart, the skin friction angles of the soils, of which only the internal friction angles are known, with FRP, steel and wood materials can be determined easily.

A Study on Characteristics of the Unit Skin Friction Using the Wall Roughness in the Soft Rock (연암부 벽면거칠기를 이용한 단위주면마찰력 특성에 관한 연구)

  • Hong, Seok-Woo;Hwang, Geun-Bae
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.35 no.12
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    • pp.7-13
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    • 2019
  • In the case of the drilled shaft, one of the methods for calculating unit skin friction stress of rock socket parts is to measure the roughness of the excavated face. This method is to estimate the unit skin frictional resistance using a device which measures the roughness shape of the excavated face in the excavation step. In this study, the roughness shapes of the face of the rock socket part in the drilled shaft were measured directly in the perforated hole and the results are used to identify the characteristics of the unit skin friction of the bedrock. In addition, the static load test and the load transfer test were performed on the same pile to verify the result of the roughness test.

Preliminary Load Tests for the Design of Large Diameter Drilled Shaft by Bi-directional Loading Method at Toe (대구경 현장타설말뚝의 설계를 위한 선단재하방법에 의한 시험말뚝 재하시험)

  • Song, Myung-Jun;Park, Yung-Ho;Kim, Dong-Jun
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 2005.03a
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    • pp.89-98
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    • 2005
  • Preliminary pile load tests for the design of large diameter drilled shaft were performed on two of reduced scale(D=1370mm) test piles. The maximum loads of 2350 tonf in each direction were applied using bi-directional hydraulic jacks(Osterberg Cell) at toe. Neither of the test piles yielded in terms of skin friction and end bearing. Comparisons of the test results with several methods that estimate pile capacity show that the method of Horvath and Kenney(1979) for skin friction and Zhang and Einstein(1998) for end bearing were most appropriate for the site. The test results were directly applied to pile design in case RQD of skin and toe was larger than that of the test pile. It is desirable, therefore, to consider not only unconfined compression strength but also rock mass properties(i.e. TCR, RQD) for skin friction and end bearing evaluation in the future.

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Analysis of the Shaft Resistance of a Pile Embedded in Sand Responding to Ground Deformation by Model Tests of Simulated Ground Heaving (실내모형실험을 통한 지반 융기시 사질토 지반에 매설된 지반 변형 대응형 말뚝의 주면 마찰 저항 분석)

  • Shin, Sehee;Lee, Kicheol
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.39 no.1
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    • pp.5-14
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    • 2023
  • The pile driving process may lead to ground heaving, causing additional positive skin friction to act on the piles, compromising their stability. This study proposes a new pile foundation type that can reduce positive skin friction. This was investigated by designing and constructing a pile with a hydraulic cylinder which actively responds to ground deformation. The newly proposed pile design was compared against traditional piles in multiple model tests where ground heaving was simulated. In the tests, base load and total shaft resistance were measured during ground heaving and with expansion of the hydraulic cylinder. As a result of the tests, a very small amount of expansion of the hydraulic cylinder member completely reduced the positive skin friction and increased the base load. Excessive expansion of the hydraulic cylinder, however, generates negative skin friction beyond the zero skin friction state. Therefore, it is necessary to estimate the appropriate level of hydraulic cylinder expansion, taking into account the amount of ground heaving and the allowable displacement of the pile.

A Study on the Negative Skin Friction based on Measurements from Existing Works Analysed by 3D Finite Element Analyses (기발표 실측치 분석을 기반으로 한 3차원 유한요소해석 수행을 통한 부마찰에 관한 연구)

  • Jeon, Sang Joon;Jeon, Young Jin;Jeon, Seung Chan;Lee, Cheol Ju
    • Journal of the Korean GEO-environmental Society
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    • v.21 no.8
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    • pp.15-27
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    • 2020
  • In the current paper, a series of advanced 3D finite element analyses have been performed on existing pieces of work of negative skin friction from a geotechnical centrifuge test and full-scale field measurements. From these analyses, key features of pile behaviour under the influence of negative skin friction which, previously, were not fully understood in existing studies, have been meticulously discussed. As such, it has been possible to successfully address several numerical modelling issues such as negative skin friction induced pile settlements and group effects (the shielding effect), the effect of sacrificial piles in groups and the interaction between the pile head and the cap, the effect of interface elements at the pile-soil interface and the time-dependent pile behaviour. During a geotechnical centrifuge test, substantial amounts of negative skin frictions were mobilised when centrifugal acceleration increased from 1g to a certain g-level due to an increase in the self-weight of soil. The behaviour of piles inside a group were heavily affected by the sacrificial piles and the connectivity between the pile head and the pile cap. In particular, as negative skin friction has time dependent qualities associated with consolidation, it was logical to perform coupled analyses when analysing piles in consolidating grounds. From the current work, several insufficiencies of previous researches have been addressed, and the engineering pile behaviour subjected to negative skin friction has been clarified.

Characteristics of Skin Friction on Compression Loaded Group Piles (압축하중을 받는 무리말뚝의 주면지지력 특성)

  • Ahn Byung-Chul;Lee Jun-Dae
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Safety
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    • v.19 no.3 s.67
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    • pp.95-100
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    • 2004
  • H-pile can be more easily driven than pipe pile by pile driver and shows high skin friction and plugging effect. And lately It is well grown that the high strength H-pile has been widely used f3r pile foundations. To compare the skin frictions of H piles under different density soil conditions, this paper presents results of a series of model tests on vertically loaded group piles. Model piles made of steel embedded in weathered granite soil were used in this study. Pile arrangements $(2\times2,\;3\tunes3)$, pile space(2D, 4D, 6D), and soil density$(D_r=40\%,\;80\%)$ were tested. The main results obtained from the model tests can be summarized as follows. The series of tests found that compression load for group piles increases as number of piles increase and piles space ratic decrease to $D_r=40\%$ of soil density. The analysis also found that the theoretical value of skin friction for group piles is greater than practical value as piles space ratio increases to $D_r=40\%$ of soil density. Piles showed the greatest difference of the skin friction in case that the pile space ratio(S/D) is 6. The theoretical value by Meyerhof and DM-7 showed 1.83 times and 1.32 times respectively as great as practical value in case of S/D=6 and $2\times2$.

A Case Study on the Stability Evaluation of Piles for Negative Skin Eviction by the LRFD Approach (LRFD설계법에 의한 부마찰력이 작용하는 말뚝의 안정성 평가 사례 연구)

  • Cho Chun-Whan;Kim Woong-Kyu;Lee Woo-Chel
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.21 no.5
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    • pp.123-131
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    • 2005
  • Recently, construction activities in reclaimed onshore areas increase in our country In this case, the stability evaluation of the piles for negative skin friction is an important factor for the design of pile foundation in soft grounds. Nevertheless, the design of piles for negative skin friction (or downdrag forces) is probably poorly understood by many geotechnical engineers. It is mainly because only the bearing capacity aspect is taken into account for the downdrag evaluation of piles in most of design specifications. However, the problems fur negative skin friction of piles are mostly related with settlement rather than bearing capacity Meanwhile, LRFD (Load Resistance Factor Design) approach considers both ultimate limit state in terms of bearing capacity and serviceability limit state in terms of settlements. This paper proposes LRFD approach for the downdrag evaluation of piles and compares this approach to traditional design approach. And also a case history is analyzed. Through the analysis some suggestions to solve the problems for the design of piles for negative skin friction are suggested.

A Study of Micro-piles Method combined with the Resisting Fixture interacting the power of frictional resistance in a contrary direction (양방향 저항체를 결합한 마이크로파일공법 연구)

  • Baik, Dong-Ho;Lee, Sang-Moo
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 2014.05a
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    • pp.74-75
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    • 2014
  • In remodeling business or construction of both new strucures and existing structures, Case that pile foundation was set is often. Micro pile, holding compressive force and tensile force by spherical friction, is supported by skin friction rather than end bearing capacity. but, This is weak in tension. Active area of micro pile's skin friction is narrow and micro pile don't do unification behavior hence. So bearing capacity was not fully mobilized in existing researching. In this study, in order to compensate for this method, micro pile to install Resisting Fixture is proposed.

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A Study on Friction Capacity Behavior for Driven Steel Pipe Pile and Drilled Shaft Pile with Field Test (항타강관말뚝과 현장타설말뚝의 주면마찰력 거동에 관한 현장실험 연구)

  • Jung, Sung-Min;Lee, Min-Hee;Song, Byeong-Deok;Choi, Yong-Kyu
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 2005.03a
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2005
  • In this study, static pile load tests for instrumented drilled shaft pile and instrumented driven steel pipe pile were performed. Based on the results of pile load test, skin friction of each stratum was compared. Skin friction of drilled shaft were more than those of driven pile at the same settlement. This was based on the difference of surface roughness of piles and pile construction methods.

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Pile Load test on a Large Barrette Pile and a Bored Pile for the Identification of the Load Transfer Characteristics (대형 바렛말뚝과 현장타설말뚝의 하중전이특성 파악을 위한 재하시험)

  • Han Sung-Gil;Park Jong-Kwan
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Railway
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    • v.9 no.4 s.35
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    • pp.493-498
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    • 2006
  • In this study, two large pile load tests were performed in the deep sand gravel deposit of Nakdong river basin so that the characteristics of the load transfer was identified. The fully instrumented rectangular barrette pile in the size of $1.5\times3.0m$ and the circular bored pile of the diameter 1.5 m were placed into the ground below 50 m. Under the applied loads of 2,400 tonf and 4,000 tonf, the test results of the load transfer showed the portion of 83% and 93% of the applied loads on the barrette pile and the bored pile, respectively, were supported by the skin friction along the pile shaft. It was revealed that the most of these skin friction mobilized in sand layer underlying clay layer having N-value more than 30 and that the friction per unit area of the bored pile was larger than the friction of barrette pile. However, if embedded in the stiff sand graval layer, the both piles were proven to be sufficient for using as the friction piles.