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Negative skin friction on driven piles in Bangkok subsoils | |
Author | Pinit Phamvan |
Call Number | AIT Diss. no. GT-89-01 |
Subject(s) | Piling (Civil engineering)--Testing |
Note | A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Engineering, School of Engineering and Technology |
Publisher | Asian Institute of Technology |
Series Statement | Dissertation ; no. GT-89-01 |
Abstract | A comprehensive instrumented pile testing program was carried out to evaluate the behavior of driven piles in Bangkok subsoils. The field experiments were designed to provide long- t erm data on negative skin friction development due to excessive settlements of the surrounding soils. The pile behaviors was investigated from the installation process, up to the stage of long- t erm negative skin friction under an embankment surcharge load. Prior to the embankment surcharge, the piles were subjected to short - term pull-out tests. Thus the short-term and long-term s kin friction can be studied. Two instrumented hollow prestressed precast concrete piles (0.4 m diameter and 26 m in length) were driven to bear in the stiff clay l aye r. They were divided into six segments and tested in tension for different pile lengths. The distribution of axial forces along the piles was recorded by two independent systems, load cells and tell- tale rods. Pore pressures and ground movements were monitored heavily in the vicinity of the test piles. In-situ strengths and the initial stress state of the test site were determined before the pile was driven. Subsoil properties were evaluated through an extensive laboratory testing program. After the short- t erm pull-out tests, an embankment of the size 24 x 14 m2 and 2 m height was constructed over the test site to provide a uniform surcharge load, which would accelerate the settlements of the surrounding ground. The long- t erm behavior was monitored for a period of about 9 months. The effectiveness of slip coat material was also studied by coating one of the test piles with bitumen compound slip layer. Negative skin friction load on pi l es was found to be dependent on t he settlement of the surrounding soil. The results of short-term load tests are able to estimate the behavior under long- term conditions. The effective stress approach, with a~ value of 0.25, may be used as an upper bound for the prediction of negative skin friction. The bitumen coated material was proved to reduce the negative skin friction to one third of the negative skin friction on the uncoated pile. The load- deformation behavior of the piles due to negative skin friction load was modelled by a FE scheme. An interface element was developed, using the stress-strain characteristics obtained from consolidated-drained direct shear tests, to simulate the behavior at the pile- soil interface. The analysis predicted satisfactorily the actual behavior of the piles under long- term conditions, using the parameters derived from short term pull-out tests. |
Year | 1989 |
Corresponding Series Added Entry | Asian Institute of Technology. Dissertation ; no. GT-89-01 |
Type | Dissertation |
School | School of Engineering and Technology (SET) |
Department | Department of Civil and Infrastucture Engineering (DCIE) |
Academic Program/FoS | Environmental Engineering and Management (EV) |
Chairperson(s) | Balasubramaniam, A.S.;Indraratna, B.; |
Examination Committee(s) | Bergado, Dennes T.;Worsak Kanok-Nukulchai;Noppadol Phien-wej; |
Scholarship Donor(s) | The Government of Japan; |
Degree | Thesis (Ph.D.) - Asian Institute of Technology, 1989 |