Thursday, April 28, 2016

The Fundamentals Of Retaining Wall

By Helen Russell


Retailing walls are walls designed to for restraining soil to slopes that are not natural. They help to retain soils between two places of uneven elevations. They are made in different places. They are made in places to allow for severe engineering and shaping to serve other purposes like hillside farming. A retaining wall may also be made in regions with undesirable slopes.

The varieties of these walls are many. Gravity, anchored, piling, and cantilever walls are major examples. They are constructed to offer support to a wedge of soil. Gravity causes retained soil to tend to shift downslope. Therefore, the way the structure is designed and installed must counteract this tendency. Lateral earth pressure starts to occur because of the gravitational pull. Generation of pressure differs according to cohesive strength and the angle of friction of retained material.

Gravity walls rely on their mass for resistance of pressure exerted on them by pressure behind. Construction is done using stones and concrete to make them heavy. Stability is improved by incorporating batter setback. Sometimes they are made to lean toward the load. Dry-stacked variety is constructed to be flexible and when constructed in regions where frosting occurs, their footings are made rigid.

Gravity walls dominated in most sites during the first half of the twentieth century. Big stones and concrete were used in their construction. During the second half of the century, gravity walls started to be made using composite materials. Gabions, crib walls, and soil-nailed walls were the major construction materials in use. Rocks are used to fill stacked steel wire baskets to construct gabions.

The construction of cantilevered retaining walls is done from internal stems made from mortared masonry, steel-reinforced, and cast-in-place concrete. The front may be buttressed in some situations. For additional strength to resist heavy loads, the front side may comprise of counterfort. Buttresses are made to resemble wing walls and are installed perpendicularly to the trend of the main wall. Compared to gravity walls, cantilevered walls consume less construction material.

Sheet pile retaining walls are placed in tight spaces and soft soils. They are made from a wide variety of materials including wood planks, vinyl, or steel driven into the soil. At least a third of the material is driven into the ground while two thirds remain above the ground. However, depending on the environment, these measurements may be altered.

Construction of bored pile walls involves assembling sequences of bored piles. Excess soil on the site of construction is excavated first. Many techniques are employed in the construction process including reinforcing beams, earth anchors, shotcrete reinforcement layer, and soil enhancement operations. Bored pile walls and sheet piling walls can be constructed in the same location. Bored pile walls are preferred if noise and vibration levels are not supposed to be very high.

Evolution of construction styles has been very fast. There are many diverse methods of reinforcing walls after being constructed. Retention methods are also many and the common ones include soil-strengthening, soil nailing, cellular confinement, and gabion meshes.




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