Bearing Capacity Of Footings And Piles - A Delusion? - DFI Annual Meting, October 14-16,1999, Dearborn, Michigan - Summary

- Organization:
- Deep Foundations Institute
- Pages:
- 18
- File Size:
- 1836 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1999
Abstract
The bearing capacity equation?"the triple N formula"? is now about 50 years old. It was developed from theory of plastic resistance of metal to a cone being pressed into the surface of the metal, superpositioned by resistance due to shear in an interparticulate medium (soil; note, we are not dealing with metallurgy), and tempered by work necessary to move the footing into the medium. The equation (and its coefficients) was "confirmed" by tests on small footings placed at or near the surface of the soil. The equation is a basic tenet of every geotechnical textbook, manual, and code. Over the years, innumerable variations of the N-coefficients and adjustments to the equation have been published. The main assumption behind the bearing capacity equation is that a shear plane develops between two essentially otherwise unaffected bodies: the main soil body and a body comprised of the footing with some soil. Moreover, the notion is that a model footing placed at or near the surface of a soil would behave proportionally or similarly to a full-scale footing, or to even a same size footing (pile toe) placed at some depth in the ground. This is not in agreement with factual observations. It is suggested that the behavior of a small or large diameter footing as well as a pile toe is governed by compression of the soil below the footing or pile toe and not by "bearing capacity".
Citation
APA:
(1999) Bearing Capacity Of Footings And Piles - A Delusion? - DFI Annual Meting, October 14-16,1999, Dearborn, Michigan - SummaryMLA: Bearing Capacity Of Footings And Piles - A Delusion? - DFI Annual Meting, October 14-16,1999, Dearborn, Michigan - Summary. Deep Foundations Institute, 1999.