4_1 Shallow Foundations

230
G. R. Dodagoudar Department of Civil Engineering Indian Institute of Technology Madras Chennai – 600 036 Foundation Engineering Principles and Practices

description

okmmko

Transcript of 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Page 1: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

G. R. Dodagoudar

Department of Civil Engineering

Indian Institute of Technology Madras

Chennai – 600 036

Foundation Engineering –

Principles and Practices

Page 2: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Shear Strength of Soils: A

Review

Page 3: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 4: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 5: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 6: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 7: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 8: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 9: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 10: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Shallow Foundations

Bearing capacity

G. R. Dodagoudar

DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING

I I T MADRAS, CHENNAI - 600 036.

Page 11: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 12: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 13: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Foundation

A foundation is that part of a structure which transmits loads

directly to the underlying soil.

Page 14: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 15: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

The function of a foundation is to transfer the structural loads

from a building safely into the ground.

The structural loads include the dead, super imposed

and wind loads. To perform the function, the foundation

must be properly designed and constructed.

Its stability depends on the behaviour under load of the soil

on which it rests and this is affected partly by the design of

the foundation and partly by the characteristics of the soil.

It is necessary in the design and construction of foundation to

pay attention to the nature and strength of the materials

to be used for the foundations as well as the likely behaviour

under load of the soils on which the foundation rests.

Importance

Page 16: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 17: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 18: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 19: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 20: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 21: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Foundation

Page 22: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 23: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 24: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 25: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Figure 1 Buildings — the Sears Tower in Chicago is one of the tallest

buildings in the world. It needs massive foundations to transmit the

structural loads into the ground. The design of these foundations depends

on the nature of the underlying soils.

Geotechnical engineers are responsible for assessing these soil conditions

and developing suitable foundation designs.

Page 26: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 27: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 28: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 29: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 30: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Footings

Page 31: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 32: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 33: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 34: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 35: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 36: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 37: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 38: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 39: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 40: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 41: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 42: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 43: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Mats/Rafts

Page 44: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 45: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 46: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 47: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Bearing Pressure

Page 48: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 49: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 50: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 51: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 52: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 53: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Example

Page 54: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 55: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 56: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 57: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 58: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 59: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 60: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 61: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 62: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 63: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 64: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 65: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 66: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

CHOICE OF FOUNDATION TYPE AND PRELIMINARY

SELECTION

Page 67: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 68: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 69: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 70: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 71: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 72: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 73: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 74: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 75: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 76: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 77: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 78: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Background and History of Bearing

Capacity

In the era before Karl Terzaghi’s bearing capacity

equation was introduced in the United States,

engineers went to their local building codes to

determine what the allowable bearing pressure was

for design of their foundations.

If they were working outside of a major metropolitan

area, where no local experience or building codes

existed, they had to refer to general texts on

“foundation soils.”

Page 79: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Before introducing the bearing capacity equation in

his 1943 textbook, Theoretical Soil Mechanics

(Terzaghi, 1943), Terzaghi discusses a footing’s load

settlement curve and how to determine a footing’s

failure loading from the load test curve.

Then Terzaghi goes on to suggest that the bearing

capacity equation is a simplified method

of estimating the failure loading of a shallow footing.

He discusses a general shear failure and a local

shear failure of foundation soils, indicating that

excessive settlement of loose sands results in a

local failure before a general shear failure can be

mobilized.

Page 80: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Early geotechnical texts such as Soil Mechanics in

Engineering Practice by Terzaghi and Peck, first

printed in 1948, include charts that give allowable

bearing pressures for 1 inch of settlement for

footings of varying widths on sands of varying

density.

Early pioneers of geotechnical practice knew

that performance of foundations was directly

related to foundation settlement.

A foundation that was load tested and designed for a

high allowable bearing pressure may not experience

a general shear failure, but if the footing settled

excessively, it failed to support the structure properly.

Page 81: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 82: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 83: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 84: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 85: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 86: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 87: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 88: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 89: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 90: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 91: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 92: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 93: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 94: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 95: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 96: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 97: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 98: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Evolution of Failure

Surfaces

Page 99: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 100: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 101: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 102: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 103: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 104: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 105: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 106: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 107: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 108: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Set-up for plate load test

Page 109: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Set-up for plate load test

Page 110: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 111: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 112: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 113: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 114: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 115: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 116: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 117: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 118: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 119: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 120: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 121: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 122: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 123: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 124: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 125: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 126: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 127: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 128: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 129: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 130: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 131: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 132: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 133: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 134: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 135: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 136: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 137: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 138: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 139: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 140: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 141: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 142: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 143: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 144: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 145: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 146: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 147: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 148: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 149: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 150: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 151: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 152: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 153: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 154: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 155: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 156: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Problems

Page 157: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 158: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 159: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Solution

Page 160: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 161: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Solution

Page 162: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 163: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 164: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 165: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Solution

Page 166: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 167: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 168: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 169: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 170: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 171: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 172: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 173: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 174: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 175: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 176: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 177: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Use general BCT

Page 178: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 179: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 180: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 181: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 182: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 183: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 184: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 185: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 186: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 187: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 188: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 189: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 190: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 191: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 192: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 193: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 194: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 195: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 196: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 197: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 198: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 199: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 200: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 201: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 202: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 203: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 204: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 205: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 206: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 207: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

The allowable bearing capacity of clays, silty

clays and plastic silts may be limited

either by the requirement of an adequate factor of

safety against shear failure

or by settlement considerations.

Page 208: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

The allowable bearing capacity of a sand depends

primarily on the density index, the stress history, the

position of the water table relative to foundation

level and the size of the foundation.

Of secondary importance are particle shape and

grading. Both the magnitude of settlement and the

value of the shear strength parameter φ ′ are

strongly dependent on density index: the denser the

sand the less scope there is for particle

rearrangement.

Page 209: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

However, the magnitude of settlement is also

influenced by the stress history of the deposit, i.e.,

whether the sand is normally consolidated or

overconsolidated and the previous stress path.

If two sands having the same grading were to exist

at the same density index but one were normally

consolidated and the other overconsolidated, the

settlement would be greater in the normally

consolidated sand for identical loading conditions.

Page 210: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 211: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 212: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 213: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Problems

Page 214: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 215: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Solution

Page 216: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 217: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 218: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 219: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 220: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 221: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 222: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 223: 4_1 Shallow Foundations

Results from elastic theory indicate that the increase

in vertical stress in the soil below the centre of a strip

footing of width B is approximately 20% of the

foundation pressure at a depth of 3B.

In the case of a square footing the corresponding

depth is 1.5B.

For practical purposes these depths can normally be

accepted as the limits of the zones of influence of the

respective foundations and are called the significant

depths.

An alternative approach is to take the significant

depth as that at which the vertical stress is 20% of the

effective overburden pressure. It is essential that the

soil conditions are known within the significant depth

of any foundation.

Page 224: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 225: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 226: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 227: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 228: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 229: 4_1 Shallow Foundations
Page 230: 4_1 Shallow Foundations