Performance of Pile–Wall System Adjacent to Footings

Author:

Sudani Ghassan A.1,Jao Mien2

Affiliation:

1. Independent Researcher, West Chester, OH 45069, USA

2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Lamar University, 4400 MLK Blvd., Beaumont, TX 77710, USA

Abstract

The performance of a retaining wall is dependent on multiple factors including lateral earth pressure, which results from backfill soils and adjacent footings located behind a retaining wall. The prediction of a retaining wall’s performance in a footing–soil–wall system (FSPS) must incorporate the influences caused by the movement of a retaining wall. This study examines the performance of a retaining wall formed by driven, precast, concrete piles located adjacent to a concrete footing using two- and three-dimensional finite element analysis (2D and 3D FEA) by ANSYS 13.0 software. Both soil and concrete are assumed to behave as non-linear, elastic-perfectly plastic and rate-independent materials in compliance with the upper-bound model of Drucker–Prager yield criterion. Three backfill and foundation soils are considered: kaolin, silty clay, and kaolin–sand. Various conditions of soil type, footing shape ratio, pile width, and footing–pile distance through 180 FEA runs are investigated. The effects of 2D and 3D FEA on the behavior of the pile–wall system are compared. The lateral deflection and pressure distribution profiles along the pile–wall are studied and presented. Two empirical equations predicting lateral deflections at the pile toe and pile head and useful for pile structural design are developed under the ultimate pressure of the adjacent footing.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference40 articles.

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3. Coduto, D.P. (2001). Foundation Design: Principles and Practices, Prentice-Hall, Inc.. [2nd ed.].

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