The axial behaviour of piles driven in chalk

Author:

Jardine Richard J.1ORCID,Buckley Róisín M.2ORCID,Liu Tingfa3ORCID,Andolfsson Thomas4ORCID,Byrne Byron W.5ORCID,Kontoe Stavroula6ORCID,McAdam Ross A.7ORCID,Schranz Fabian8ORCID,Vinck Ken1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Imperial College London, London, UK.

2. School of Engineering, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.

3. Department of Civil Engineering, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK; formerly Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering,Imperial College London, London, UK.

4. Formerly Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; now SKB AB, Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management Co., Solna, Sweden

5. Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.

6. Department of Civil Engineering, University of Patras, Patras, Greece; Visiting Reader at Imperial College London, London, UK.

7. Formerly University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; now Orsted Power (UK) Ltd, London, UK.

8. Formerly Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; now Office of the Tyrolean Regional Government, Innsbruck, Austria.

Abstract

This paper describes research into the poorly understood axial behaviour of piles driven in chalk. Comprehensive dynamic and monotonic axial testing on 27, mostly instrumented, piles undertaken for the ALPACA joint industry projects is reported and interpreted covering: diameters between 139 mm and 1·8 m; lengths from 3 to 18 m; different pile material types; tip and groundwater conditions; and ages after driving. The experiments show the factors that influence resistance most strongly are: (a) pile end conditions; (b) slenderness ratio and flexibility; (c) shaft material; (d) age after driving; (e) relative water table depth; and (f) whether loading is compressive or tensile. Varying the factors systematically identified a remarkable average long-term shaft resistance range from below 11 kPa to more than 200 kPa for piles driven at the same low- to medium-density chalk test site in Kent (UK). Dynamic and static analyses demonstrate that soil resistances to driving were generally well predicted by the Chalk ICP-18 short-term formulation. Considering the piles’ long-term behaviour, the Chalk ICP-18 approach over-predicted capacity, while the widely used CIRIA approach proved over-conservative for most cases. The research enabled the development of a revised ‘ALPACA-SNW’ long-term capacity assessment method that matches the test outcomes far more faithfully.

Publisher

Thomas Telford Ltd.

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology

Reference37 articles.

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