Title: The Pressuremeter
1- The Pressuremeter
- and
- Foundation
- Engineering
- Professor Trevor Smith
- Department of Civil and
- Environmental Engineering
- Portland State University
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
2Topics
- Historical Perspectives
- Equipment and Procedures
- Drilling Procedures
- PMT Parameters
- Cavity Expansion Theory
- Soil Properties
- Foundation Design-Ultimate
- Foundation Design-Serviceability
- Case Histories Collapsible Soil Predictions of
Settlement, and Bonneville JFBS shafts under
lateral load
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
3Historical Perspective
- 1933 Kogler in Germany chain driven-little
development - 1955 Louis Menard in France develops the 3 cell
pneumatic/hydraulic 3 cell prebored PMT and
begins the work on direct design rules-published
in 1963 - 1959 Fukuoka in Japan develops the K-Value meter
- 1965 Jezequel and other in France develop self
boring - 1966 Higher pressure PMT in Japan called OYO
meter - 1971 Hughes and wroth at Cambridge university
perfect the Cam-Ko-Meter as self boring on board
instrumentation - 1978 First book published called The
Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering - 1982 Briaud and Smith at Texas AM develop rugged
hydraulic TEXAM units with single cell probe - 1982-present worldwide developments of PMT-CPT
- 1988 ASTM D4719-87 standard for PMT covering
equipment, drilling techniques, testing and
accuracy. - 82,86,90,95 Dedicated International conferences
contain BOK
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
4Equipment and Procedures
- Original Menard 3 cell units require
nitrogen/water control units and are stress level
controlled-estimates made of the total pressure,
PL, and steps of PL/10 made. ASTM procedure A. - Hydraulic single cell probes require simple units
using strain controlled volume injection. ASTM
procedure A or B. - The typical probe sizes are EX, AX, BX, and NX
(32mm, 50mm, 63mm, 72mm) for prebored devices- NX
only for selfboring devices. Prebored dominates
the north American market to either ASTM
procedure A or B. - Menard (30k) and Texam (15k) devices for soil
typically maximum pressure of 4 MPa (40 tsf) and
OYO and others in rock up to 20MPa. - With prebored holes of diameter, Dh, 1.03 D Dh
1.2D must be carefully prebored for each test!
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
5Drilling Procedures
- Both 2- 15/16 and 3 -1/8 inch roller bits have
proved useful for hole preparation. In addition
coring through dense gravels is a possibility - Each test section must be drilled and tested as
quickly as practical. You cannot drill ahead and
prepare multiple sections. - Typically roller bits in sand and drag bits, or
roller bits, work well in clay. Avoid end
downward mud circulation. - The hole stability and tolerance is the 1
priority for good data. No reaming or washing is
allowed because of scour. The lowest pump
pressure and rotation speed is desirable. ASTM
specs maximum of 60-rpm drill string rotation,
and 30 psi down pressure and 4 gal/min
circulation. - NEVER wash, or ream the hole to remove excess
cuttings. The over drilling of the test section
to allow for 6 inch to 12 inch sump is better to
allow excess cuttings to collect. The Probe does
not test the bore hole bottom, only the side
wall. -
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
6PMT Parameters
After corrections for membrane stiffness and
volume losses in supply tubing - net cylindrical
cavity expansion
True limit pressure, PL, at infinite expansion,
practical limit pressure, Pl, at double cavity
(41 radial increase). Expansion passes through
Ko and reveals the linear expansion behavior-thus
modulus, Eo, before yield, Py, at borehole wall
is initiated and Pl reached. We may
cycle-creep-conduct Eo studies to variable strain
or stress level etc.
So mechanics tells us the net increase in
pressure beyond Poh (Ko), which is Pl, is
related to foundation bearing capacity-and
settlement design to distribution of Eo and the
loading shape.
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
7Cavity Expansion Theory
- A surprising amount is known of the behavior of
soils under cylindrical expansion - Yield begins on the borehole wall first and
propagates into the soil mass. - Stress and strains decay radialy away from the
borehole as the R2. Radial strain is compressive
and circumferential strain is negative. - To avoid tensile failure unload/reload loops must
satisfy certain conditions. - In elasticity the shear modulus is measured G
Vav ?P/?V, Eo 2G (1?). - In plasticity PL Poh Su(1LnG/Su)- in granular
material dilatancy prevents easy relationships to
f. Use Pl directly in design. - Cohesive behavior Eo/Plgt12, granular 7lt Eo/Pllt12
?0.33
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
8Soil Properties
- Following ASTM standards provides undrained
behavior in cohesive soils and drained in
cohesionless soils. Recall no control over
drainage is available-but pwp can be measured for
research purposes. - Reliable measurements of Su possible but not
ffriction angles most direct equations assume no
volume change. Widely used empirical f Pl
chart from Menard.
e.g. Su/Pa0.21 Pl/Pa 0.75 to UCBriaud (1985)
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
9Foundation Design-Ultimate
Bearing capacity and settlement can clearly be
seen as a function of the lateral support from
the surrounding soil. Obvious in sands-not so in
clays. PMT direct design place the foundation at
He equivalent depth, in equivalent limit soil
Ple. Capacity is the pressure to cause
settlement of B/10
Design methods for pile Qs and Qp are shown of
superior reliability-Qult not QL
Design charts for the k factor in sand, stilts
and clays from load tests. Unique geometric
factors for inclined and slopes. Strip footings
use k/1.2
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
10Foundation Design-Serviceability
First term from elastic distortion and second
term all round spherical squeeze.
Consolidation based settlement applies to soil
layers with high spherical stresses-most
settlement in uniform soils is elastic based
from deviatoric stresses and is much deeper. PMT
seeks to separate these and uses Ec and Ed as
weighted averages over different depths- using
the ev distribution. Ec/a is a corrected
consolidation modulus.
PMT Pile settlement methods have shown 95
probability that s lt 1.25 Dia (lognormal)
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
11Research Case History Collapsible Soil
Predictions of Settlement
- Colluvium deposits from flash floods in the arid
west threaten valuable agricultural land and the
infrastructure. These are meta-stable
soils-often silty sandy gravels- triggered by
moisture and/or stress changes illustrated by
dramatic settlements. - NCRs (formally SCS) in 1990s had problems with
relicensing debris basin dams due to visible
cracking - Sinkholes in the basin, longitudinal and
transverse cracking with cracks up to 150mm
uncertain stability with an impoundment
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
12Research Case History Collapsible Soil
Predictions of Settlement
- A comprehensive set of PMT based collapse test
field procedures and FEM modeling recommendations
to study retrofit options - New settlement methods to replace the double
oedometer tests for all soil types
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
13Practice Case History Lateral Load Deflection
Predictions on Bonneville Dam JFBS
- Four feet sq. concrete flumes, supported on 10
feet diameter shafts carry juveniles gt250 feet to
midstream away from predator fish. High and low
level. - Shafts on 120 feet spacing, 70 feet stick up
above M/l- embedded 100 feet into 50 feet of silt
and sand overlying gravels produce M/l rotations
and deflections-tolerable flume deflection 2
feet. - Flood frequency offer submerged horizontal repeat
monotonic loads to shafts. P-y and cyclic problem
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
14Practice Case History Lateral Load Deflections
Predictions on Bonneville JFBS
- Use of PMT gave expansion response in silts,
sands and gravels to construct P-y curves
following (F-y) (Q-y) principles. - Range of shaft top deflections and rotations with
initial LPILE analysis gave concern on design
life issues and tripped full scale load testing-
via cables in tension. - Poor load test performance would trip enhancement
option - 40 feet drag collars through silt and
loose sand. - LPILE subroutines with conservative properties
proved to under predict movements-PMT P-y methods
better match to measured response. - PMT predictions accepted with cyclic power law
decay. No Drag collar s required for 50 year life
and 1.5M saving
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
15Questions?
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
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17No collapse
slight collapse
Moderate collapse
severe collapse
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21?0.33
The Pressuremeter and Foundation Engineering
22pics
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