ANCHORED PILES IN DEEP EXCAVATIONS: A CASE STUDY

Lopez S.; Sanhueza C.; Candia G.

Keywords: deep excavation, soilder piles, earth pressures, anchors, numerical modeling

Abstract

Traditionally the temporary support of deep excavations in gravely soils consists of non-secant piles anchored at multiplelevels. The standard practice for its design is the use of simplified methods and limit equilibrium principles, such as Terzagui’smethod or the FHWA 99 guidelines, despite the fact that these procedures were originally developed for sheet piles oranchored walls on relatively shallow excavations supporting a medium dense soil. The present study draws on the applicabilityof such simplified tools to model the static response of deep excavations in stiff gravelly soils and their implications for thedesign. For that purpose, the static response of an excavation supported with anchored piles was evaluated with a detailedfinite element model of a case study and the results compared with the simplified hand-calculation procedures. The study unitwas the excavation for the Beauchef Poniente building located in the fluvial deposits of the Mapocho River in Santiago, whichhas a 6200 m2 plan area and a depth of 28 m. The excavation was supported with reinforced concrete piles of 1 m in diameterand anchored at three levels. A plain strain finite element model was developed in PLAXIS 2D using the Hardening Soilconstitutive relation to capture the shear-deformation response of the gravel. The soil parameters were calibrated against largescale triaxial tests on Santiago gravel and the displacement profiles measured with inclinometers. The analysis showed thatthe static earth pressures on the pile and anchors tension computed from the 2-D non-linear finite elements model are inexcellent agreement with the simplified design procedures such FHWA guidelines or simple elastic beam approximations.

Más información

Fecha de publicación: 2017
Año de Inicio/Término: January 9th to 13th 2017
Página de inicio: 1
Página final: 11
Idioma: en