Evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soils

Abstract Driven pile foundations may experience an increase in bearing capacity overtime after installation which is referred to as pile set-up or freeze. Field observations have demonstrated that pile set-up could be substantial and the evolution of pile shaft capacity may continue for an extended...

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Main Authors: Mohammad Amin Hosseini, Mohammad Rayhani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-07-01
Series:International Journal of Geo-Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40703-017-0049-8
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spelling doaj-9e614760465b4dd7a8aacb1b2316c2302020-11-25T02:45:42ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Geo-Engineering2198-27832017-07-018111510.1186/s40703-017-0049-8Evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soilsMohammad Amin Hosseini0Mohammad Rayhani1Geoengineering Research Group, Carleton UniversityGeoengineering Research Group, Carleton UniversityAbstract Driven pile foundations may experience an increase in bearing capacity overtime after installation which is referred to as pile set-up or freeze. Field observations have demonstrated that pile set-up could be substantial and the evolution of pile shaft capacity may continue for an extended time after pile installation. This paper presents results of a series of pile load tests conducted on medium-scale steel and concrete pile foundations driven into marine sensitive clay in Gloucester, Ontario. The piles were tested instantly after driving to measure their initial bearing capacities, and were tested repeatedly over different elapsed times to study the evolution of pile shaft capacity over time. The excess pore water pressure around the pile was also monitored by a piezometer. The pile performance analysis was established by monitoring the shaft capacity of driven model piles over 1 month in soft marine clay. The average pile capacity measurements for both steel and concrete piles showed approximately 4.5–5.5 times increase in the pile capacity 30 days after initial driving depending on the type of the piles used.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40703-017-0049-8Marine clayPile shaft capacityPile set-upPile load test
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammad Amin Hosseini
Mohammad Rayhani
spellingShingle Mohammad Amin Hosseini
Mohammad Rayhani
Evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soils
International Journal of Geo-Engineering
Marine clay
Pile shaft capacity
Pile set-up
Pile load test
author_facet Mohammad Amin Hosseini
Mohammad Rayhani
author_sort Mohammad Amin Hosseini
title Evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soils
title_short Evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soils
title_full Evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soils
title_fullStr Evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soils
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soils
title_sort evolution of pile shaft capacity over time in marine soils
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of Geo-Engineering
issn 2198-2783
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Abstract Driven pile foundations may experience an increase in bearing capacity overtime after installation which is referred to as pile set-up or freeze. Field observations have demonstrated that pile set-up could be substantial and the evolution of pile shaft capacity may continue for an extended time after pile installation. This paper presents results of a series of pile load tests conducted on medium-scale steel and concrete pile foundations driven into marine sensitive clay in Gloucester, Ontario. The piles were tested instantly after driving to measure their initial bearing capacities, and were tested repeatedly over different elapsed times to study the evolution of pile shaft capacity over time. The excess pore water pressure around the pile was also monitored by a piezometer. The pile performance analysis was established by monitoring the shaft capacity of driven model piles over 1 month in soft marine clay. The average pile capacity measurements for both steel and concrete piles showed approximately 4.5–5.5 times increase in the pile capacity 30 days after initial driving depending on the type of the piles used.
topic Marine clay
Pile shaft capacity
Pile set-up
Pile load test
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40703-017-0049-8
work_keys_str_mv AT mohammadaminhosseini evolutionofpileshaftcapacityovertimeinmarinesoils
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