Chapter 5 Lateral Earth Pressure
Chapter 5 Lateral Earth Pressure
Chapter 5 Lateral Earth Pressure
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Contents
• Geotechnical applications
• K0, active & passive states
• Rankine’s earth pressure theory
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Geotechnical Application - Lateral Support
In geotechnical engineering, it is often necessary to
prevent lateral soil movements.
Tie rod
Anchor
Sheet pile
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Sheet Pile
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Sheet Pile
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Sheet Pile
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Lateral Support
geosynthetics
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Lateral Support
filled with
Crib walls have been used in Queensland. soil
Good drainage & allow plant growth.
Looks good. Interlocking
stretchers
and headers
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Retaining Walls - Applications
Road
Train
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Retaining Walls - Applications
highway
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Retaining Walls - Applications
High-rise building
basement wall
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Gravity Retaining Walls
cement mortar
plain concrete or
stone masonry
cobbles
Theyrely
They relyon
ontheir
theirself
selfweight
weightto
to
supportthe
support thebackfill
backfill
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Earth Pressure at Rest
In a homogeneous natural soil deposit,
GL
v’
h’ X
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Estimating K0
For normally consolidated clays and granular /
cohesionless soils,
K0 = 1 – sin ’ (Jaky formula)
=
+
Rankine’s Earth Pressure Theory
( Assumption : Frictionless retaining wall )
Active/Passive Earth Pressures - in granular /
cohesionless soils
Wall moves
away from soil
Wall moves A
Active Earth Pressures
towards soil
Activestate
Active state
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Active Earth Pressure
- in granular /
cohesionless soils
As the wall moves away from the soil,
e l ope
re env
u
fail Initially (K0 state)
Failure (Active state)
v’
active earth
pressure decreasing h’
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Active Earth Pressure
- in granular /
cohesionless soils
l ope
e
env
ure
fail
WJM Rankine
(1820-1872)
[h’]active v’
90+
[h’]active v’
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Active Earth Pressure
- in granular /
cohesionless soils
As the wall moves away from the soil,
h’ K0 state
v’ z
Active
h’ A state
wall movement
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Active Earth Pressure
- in cohesive soils
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Passive Earth Pressure
- in granular /
cohesionless soils
As the wall moves towards the soil,
Initially (K0 state)
Failure (Active state) e l ope
re env
u
fail
passive earth
pressure
v’
increasing h’
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Passive Earth Pressure
- in granular /
cohesionless soils
l ope
e
env
ure
fail
v’ [h’]passive
90+
[h’]passive
v’
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Passive Earth Pressure
- in granular /
cohesionless soils
As the wall moves towards the soil,
h’ increases till failure occurs.
h’ Passive state
v’
h ’ B
K0 state
wall movement
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Passive Earth Pressure
- in cohesive soils
Active state
K0 state
Wall movement
(not to scale) 32
Rankine’s Earth Pressure Theory
- in cohesive soils
1 sin
[ h ' ]active K A v '2c K A KA
1 sin
tan 2 ( 45 / 2)
1 sin
[ h ' ] passive K P v '2c K P KP
1 sin
tan 2 ( 45 / 2)
C=0
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Earth Pressure Distribution
- in granular /
cohesionless soils
[h’]active
PA and PP are the
resultant active
and passive thrusts
on the wall
[h’]passive H
PA=0.5 KAH2
h PP=0.5 KPh2
KPh KAH
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FORCES ACTING ON A WALL
- in granular /
cohesionless soils
KaqH
½ Kpg’H2 H ½ Kag’H2 ½ gwhw2
H
hw
H/2
H/3 H/3 hw/3
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Rankine’s Lateral Earth Pressure for A Sloping Backfill &
A Sloping Wall Face
cos( )
cos( ) 1 sin 2 '2 sin ' cos a H Ho
Ka cos cos
cos 2 (cos sin 2 ' sin 2 )
b
cos( ) 1 sin '2 sin ' cos a
2
Kp H
cos 2 (cos sin 2 ' sin 2 ) P
h x
' 1 1 sin Ho
a 45 sin
2 2 2 sin ' H/3
' 1 1 sin q
p 45 sin
2 2 2 sin '
sin ' sin a
a tan 1
1 sin ' cos a
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Rankine’s Lateral Earth Pressure for A Sloping
Backfill & A Vertical Wall Face
In the case of the wall with a vertical face, Ka and Kp can be simplified to
the following equation:
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Coulomb’s Earth Pressure Theory
(Consider friction between wall face and backfilling
cohesionless soils)
Modified Coulomb’s lateral earth pressure coefficients :
cos 2 ( ' )
Ka 2 b
sin( ' ) sin( ' ) 1/ 2
cos cos( ) 1
2
cos( ) cos( ) P
h d
cos 2 ( ' ) Ho
Kp 2
sin( ' ) sin( ' ) 1/ 2 Ho/3
cos cos( ) 1
2
cos( ) cos( ) q
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Coulomb’s Earth Pressure Theory
For a large d (i.e. d > f’/3), the passive pressure is overestimated due to the
wall friction causes the slip plane to be curved. Thus, the a correction factor
should be applied to the Kp:
d/f'
f' -0.7 -0.6 -0.5 -0.4 -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 0
15 0.96 0.93 0.91 0.88 0.85 0.83 0.8 0.78
20 0.94 0.9 0.86 0.82 0.79 0.75 0.72 0.68
25 0.91 0.86 0.81 0.76 0.71 0.67 0.62 0.57
30 0.88 0.81 0.75 0.69 0.63 0.57 0.52 0.47
35 0.84 0.75 0.67 0.6 0.54 0.48 0.42 0.36
40 0.78 0.68 0.59 0.51 0.44 0.38 0.32 0.26
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Application of Lateral Earth Pressures to Retaining Walls
A) Stability of Rigid Retaining Walls
(a) Checking for translational:
T
( FS )T 1.5
PaH
Where, PaH = lateral active force pushing against the wall, and
T = sliding resistance at the base
= Rz tanf’b (for effective stress analysis)
= swB (for total stress analysis)
Whereby Rz = resultant vertical force
f’b = interface friction angle between wall base and soil,
≈ 0.5 to 0.67f’
sw = wall adhesion ≈ 0.5cu or 50kPa which ever lower
B = horizontal width of the base
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Pa : Active lateral force
Pav : Vertical component of the active lateral force
PaH : Horizontal component of the active lateral force
Ws Pa Pa
PaV PaV
Ws
PaH PaH
Ww Ww
B B
Gravity wall Cantilever wall
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(b) Checking for rotation :
xa
xs xa
Pa Pa
xw Ws xs
PaV xw PaV
Ws
PaH PaH
Ww za Ww za
B B
x x
Gravity wall Cantilever wall
The rotation of the wall about its toe is satisfied if the resultant vertical force
lies within the middle third of the base (i.e. B/3 ≤ x ≤ 2B/3).
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Center line
B/6 B/6
e e
B/2
Ww xw Ws xs PaV xa PaH z a
x
Ww Ws PaV B
x
B/3 2B/3
The wall is safe against rotation if Safe zone
B/3 ≤ x ≤ 2B/3, the eccentricity of the resultant vertical
load, e must be ≤ B/6; whereby, e = |(B/2- x )|
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(c) Checking for bearing capacity:
The maximum pressure imposed on the soil at the base of the wall must not
exceed the allowable soil bearing capacity, that is:
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(e) Checking for seepage:
To avoid liquefaction:
imax icr /( FS ) S
imax : maximum hydraulic gradient developed under seepage
icr : the critical hydraulic gradient in soil
(FS)S : the factor of safety for seepage and is conventionally > 3.
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