Posted in Deep Foundations, Soil Mechanics

Comments on “Using the Impulse-Response Pile Data for Soil Characterization”

This is another post on a paper (linked to from here) which cites my work, in this case two of them: Improved Methods for Forward and Inverse Solution of the Wave Equation for Piles and Closed Form Solution of the Wave Equation for Piles. The concept is simple but the execution, not so much, and as with anything with geotechnical engineering there are pitfalls on the way to a usable solution.

We start with an existing technology: low-strain integrity testing of piles. A simple example of this is shown above, it’s the Pilewave program from Piletest. (Yes, I’m aware that it’s the Windows 3.1 version, if you’re interesting in running DOS and Windows 3.1 programs to save on the expense of “new” engineering software, you can visit Partying Like It’s 1987: Running WEAP87 and SPILE (and other programs) on DOSBox.)

With that distraction out of the way, note that, as the stress wave goes down and back up the pile, there is attenuation due to the interaction with the soil. In the simple demo of Pilewave, the soil resistance is constant along the shaft. But…if we could determine that the pile didn’t have defects which reflected waves, could we use information from the soil attenuation to determine the type of soil surrounding the pile at any given elevation? The answer in principle is “yes” and this paper, although not unique, it is an interesting step forward.

Pile Integrity Testing is a low-strain technique. That’s in contrast to the high-strain methods we’re used to in pile driving analysis. This one takes a leaf from the seismic refraction method (which will be featured as before in Soils in Construction, Seventh Edition) which is also a low-strain technique, as it is a geophysical method. The idea is that the pile acts as a probe into the soil; the response to exitation can be inversely analysed to determine the types of soils around the pile. As the paper notes, if you divide up the pile into enough “layers” the actual soil layering itself (based on the properties returned to you by the method) will basically emerge from the data.

As is generally the case with inverse methods, the solution is complex; it is described in the paper. There are a few comments that I would like to make as follows:

I hope that this research continues; I think it has potential.

Posted in Civil Engineering, Geotechnical Engineering

NAVFAC DM 7.2: Geotechnical Design in Problem Soils and Specialty Construction Methods

This week we’ll look at the first chapter of the book. The whole business of “problem soils” is not straightforward because it’s a matter of degree. Given the nature of soils vs. other engineering materials, all soils are problem soils; it’s just that some soils pose a greater problem to those of us who choose to build on, under or next to them than others, greatly so in some cases.

Most of the problem soils identified in the chapter are clays: loess, expansive soils, residual silts and clays, etc. Organic soils are included in this list, although the best way to deal with most of these is to avoid them altogether. Most of the descriptions of these soils is qualitative rather than quantitative, and that’s the weakness of the whole discussion. While general awareness of these soils and the challenges they create is useful, some quantitative description would have been useful.

An example of this is the determination of the growth of expansive soils with changing water content. Many of the studies of the volume change in these soils produce results that are either too specific or too difficult to readily implement either in an academic setting (where qualitative discussions of these soils abound) or in practice. Some of this is addressed in DM 7.1, but a more thorough approach would have been appreciated. I tackled this issue by presenting van der Merwe’s method in a more detailed fashion than usual; some more of this here would have been helpful.

The last part of the chapter deals with specialty construction methods in a page diagram reminiscent of the old driven pile diagrams from the previous edition. These are helpful because many proprietary methods don’t get the coverage in undergraduate texts that would be useful in the field. Fortunately in these cases specific references to more detailed descriptions–including design information–are given. The documents referred to are available on this site.

And a word of thanks…

I want to thank all of you who ordered the new DM 7.2 after its introduction last month. And that was quite a few of you: this has been the most successful publication launch of any book I have offered since I started doing this in 2006. Thank you so much for your support of our publications; it means a great deal for the continuation of this site.

And then there was another surprise last week in the video launching of the book from the Geo-Institute:

Notice the book cover on the splash screen? I had no idea they would do that. The first volume noted that it had been on the bookshelves of engineers for many years, and at this point the only way to acquire these books in print (AFAIK) is here.