3.7 Retaining Wall and Its Stability
3.7 Retaining Wall and Its Stability
3.7 Retaining Wall and Its Stability
Figure below shows the application of the trial Wedge method to the
problem of simple retaining wall without wall friction. A planar failure
wedge IJM is considered. There are distributed normal stresses along IJ
and JM and distributed shear stress along JM. The resultants of these
stresses are carried out in the analysis. The forces acting at the free body
IJM are:
or, Pa = W tan( )
or, Pa = 1/2 H2 cot tan ( ) -(1)
Now the problem is to find out the maximum value of P which would give the value of earth
pressure in active case. This is done by differentiating P with respect to and equating to zero.
Then:
Now the problem is to find out the maximum value of P to fail the wedge in the active case. This
is done by differentiating Pp with respect to and equating to Zero. Then:
Retaining Walls
Structures designed and constructed to sustain the earth
pressure.
structure used to retain soil, rock or other materials.
Retaining walls are usually built to hold back soil
mass. However, retaining walls can also be constructed for
aesthetic landscaping purposes.
GL2
BACK SOIL
GL1
1. Gravity Walls
o Simplest of all.
o Retains the backfill due to its weight.
o Much thicker in section Resist movement because of their
heavy sections so stability depends on the self weight of the
wall.
o Built of mass concrete or stone or brick masonry.
o No reinforcement is required in these walls.
Depend on their own weight and any soil resting on the
concrete in resisting lateral earth forces.
Generally economical up to 3m (10 ft.) in height for cast
concrete structures.
Usually are sufficiently massive to be unreinforced.
Monolithic cast walls are generally formed on site.
Not economical for design and high walls.
2. Semi-gravity Walls
o Not as heavy as gravity walls.
o A small amount of reinforcement is used for reducing the
mass of concrete.
o A specialized form of gravity walls is a semi-gravity retaining
wall.
o These have some tension reinforcing steel included so as to
minimize the thickness of the wall without requiring extensive
reinforcement.
o They are a blend of the gravity wall and the cantilever wall
designs.
4. Counterfort Walls
o Similar to cantilever walls except that the stem of the walls
span horizontally between vertical brackets known as
counterforts.
o Similar to cantilever walls except they have thin vertical
concrete webs at regular intervals along the backside of the
wall. These webs are known as counterforts.
o Counterforts tie the slab and base together, and the purpose
of them is to reduce the shear forces and bending moments
imposed on the wall by the soil. A secondary effect is to
increase the weight of the wall from the added concrete.
o Can be precast or formed on site.
o More economical than cantilever walls for heights above 8 m
(25 ft).
5. Buttressed Walls
o Similar to counterfort walls except the brackets or buttress
walls are provided on the opposite side of the backfill.
Similar to Cantilever retaining walls, but thin slab stems may
be used at some interval to tie the base slab and stem in
order to reduce the shear force and bending moment for
more economical design
6. Crib Walls
Crib walls are made up of interlocking individual boxes made
from timber or pre-cast concrete.
The boxes are then filled with crushed stone or other coarse
granular materials to create a free draining structure.
There are two basic types of crib wall:
- Timber, and
- Reinforced pre-cast concrete.
7. Gabion walls
Gabions are multi-celled, welded wire or rectangular wire
mesh boxes, which are then rockfilled, and used for
construction of erosion control structures and to stabilize
steep slopes.
Their applications include,
- Retaining walls,
- Bridge abutments,
- Wing walls,
- Culvert headwalls,
- Outlet aprons,
- Shore and beach protection walls, and
- Temporary check dams.
Note that the top of the stem of any retaining wall should not
be less than about 12 in.(0.3 m) for proper placement of
concrete.
The depth, D, to the bottom of the base slab should be a
minimum of 2 ft (0.6 m).
However, the bottom of the base slab should be positioned
below the seasonal frost line.
Base Sliding
Overturning
Bearing Capacity
Wq
1. Weight of RW (W)
Weight of stem (W1)
Weight of footing or
base or base slab (W2)
2. Weight of soil above the base slab (Ws)
W1
Ws
3. Weight of surcharge (if any) (Wq)
Pp
W2
4. Active earth pressure force (Pa)
5. Passive earth pressure force (Pp)
R
(acting in front of wall is usually ignored because of the possibility
of disturbance, erosion, etc.)
6.Reaction offered by the soil under the base of the wall, R
(R = Resultant force acting on the base = Resultant of Pa and W)
Pa
(a) by overturning
(b) by sliding
(c) by bearing capacity
failure
(d) by deep-seated shear
failure
Overturning Moment,
Gravity RW
Cantilever RW
Shear strength of the soil immediately below the base slab may be
represented as
Therefore,
i.e.
Numerical: 01
Take qu = 567.41 KN/m2
Numerical: 02