Micropiles.
and forming a pile 152 mm in diameter. The piles extended through overburden soils to sandstone at a depth of 24.7 m. The capacity was developed principally through side resistance in the sandstone.
Go ´mez et al. (2003) describe the testing of a micropile with a diameter of 219 mm and a length of 7.13 m, consisting of a central casing with a diameter of 178 mm that was embedded in grout. The soil at the test site consisted of 3.0 meters of residual soil above rock. The instrumentation revealed that the bond between the rock and the grout did not fail, but some loss of load transfer in skin friction was noted as the movement of the pile relative to the soil increased above 0.05 mm.
If micropiles are used to sustain compressive loads, the engineer should compute the buckling load by using a computer code. The unfactored lateral load should be applied, and the compressive load is increased in increments until failure occurs by excessive lateral deflection. Pile-head fixity must be modeled as well as possible or the analyses should be performed with a range of pile-head fixities that encompass the value to be anticipated.
4 comments:
How do I get more information on micropiles? I am doing a research project on them and am finding it hard to find multiple resources that say the same thing.
I spoke to a knowledgeable expert and he explained all the advantages of micropiles. It really cleared things up for me.
I have never heard about micropiles before reading this! Thank you for all the helpful information, I really appreciate it!
There's a pretty unique feat of engineering occurring in Provo, Utah. The LDS church is restoring a building and expanding it underground, but in order to take the old foundation out and put the new one in, they suspended the structure on micropiles. It's pretty cool actually!
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