Measuring The Soil-Structure Interaction Of Laterally Loaded Piles

Deep Foundations Institute
Muhannad T. Suleiman
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
2
File Size:
106 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2011

Abstract

The design of deep foundations supporting heavy buildings, bridges, transmission lines, and highway structures, is governed by lateral loads in many cases. However, due to the use of empirical or semiempirical approaches to develop the soil force-displacement relationships (i.e., p-y curves), a wide range of recommendations are presented in the literature. Recent efforts by the author and co-workers enabled simultaneous direct measurements of soil-pile interaction pressure and lateral movement along the pile length, resulting in p-y curves based on direct measurement. Advanced sensors including sheet pressure sensors and shape acceleration arrays were used in these experiments. The experiments were conducted at the Soil-Structure Interaction (SSI) facility funded by the Major Research Instrumentation Program at the National Science Foundation. This paper focuses on the SSI of single laterally loaded piles. The test pile was 101.6 mm in diameter and 1.42 m long, which were installed in well-graded loose sand. This paper provides a summary of the installation and testing procedures, soil properties, pile instrumentation, measured lateral load-displacement response, strain profile along the pile length, lateral movement along the pile length and the pressures measured at the soil-pile interface. Furthermore, the paper presents measured p-y curves compared to estimated p-y curves using empirical methods available in the literature.
Citation

APA: Muhannad T. Suleiman  (2011)  Measuring The Soil-Structure Interaction Of Laterally Loaded Piles

MLA: Muhannad T. Suleiman Measuring The Soil-Structure Interaction Of Laterally Loaded Piles. Deep Foundations Institute, 2011.

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