Friction fatigue on displacement piles in sand

Author:

White D. J.1,Lehane B. M.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge UK

2. School of Civil and Resource Engineering, University of Western Australia Crawley, Western Australia

Abstract

Experiments with instrumented displacement piles have shown that the ultimate shaft friction that can develop in a given sand horizon decreases as the pile tip penetrates to deeper levels. This phenomenon, which is now commonly referred to as friction fatigue, is investigated here using centrifuge model piles equipped with lateral stress sensors, and by drawing on other experimental data from the laboratory and the field. It is shown that the primary mechanism controlling friction fatigue is the cyclic history imparted during pile installation to soil elements at the pile–sand interface. For a given installation method the stationary lateral stress acting at any given level on a displacement pile can be described as a relatively unique function of the cone penetration test end resistance and the number of cycles imposed during installation. The strong influence of cycling, which is also seen in cyclic constant normal stiffness interface shear tests, is attributed to contraction of a narrow shear zone at the shaft–soil interface that is surrounded by soil with a relatively high lateral stiffness.

Publisher

Thomas Telford Ltd.

Subject

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

Reference30 articles.

1. Estimation of Pile Friction Degradation from Shearbox Tests

2. Chow F. C. Investigations into the behaviour of displacement piles for offshore foundations. PhD thesis, 1997, Imperial College, University of London.

3. DeJong J. T. Investigation of particulate-continuum interface mechanisms and their assessment through a multi-friction sleeve penetrometer attachment. PhD thesis, 2001, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA.

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