Earth berms left in place against a wall during bulk excavation can provide an effective means of enhancing the stability and reducing the displacement of an embedded wall. Stability calculations for an earth berm supported wall will often need to be carried out using effective stress (rather than total stress) analysis representing long-term or drained (rather than short-term or undrained) conditions. In this paper, a multiple Coulomb wedge analysis using effective stress soil parameters is used to estimate the pressure distribution on the wall as the result of the presence of the berm. Its use in limit equilibrium wall stability calculations is compared with two commonly used empirical methods of representing a berm in such an analysis. It is shown that the raised effective formation method of representing a berm—which gives good results in an undrained or total stress analysis—is unconservative for an analysis using effective stress soil parameters, and a modified raised effective formation method is proposed.
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February 2008
Research Article|
February 01 2008
Effective-stress analysis of berm-supported retaining walls Available to Purchase
J. A. Smethurst, BEng, PhD;
J. A. Smethurst, BEng, PhD
Research Fellow
School of Civil Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton
UK
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W. Powrie, MA, MSc, PhD, CEng, FICE
W. Powrie, MA, MSc, PhD, CEng, FICE
Professor of Geotechnical Engineering and Head of School
School of Civil Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton
UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
May 24 2006
Accepted:
May 31 2007
Online ISSN: 1751-8563
Print ISSN: 1353-2618
© 2008 Thomas Telford Ltd
2008
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Geotechnical Engineering (2008) 161 (1): 39–48.
Article history
Received:
May 24 2006
Accepted:
May 31 2007
Citation
Smethurst JA, Powrie W (2008), "Effective-stress analysis of berm-supported retaining walls". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Geotechnical Engineering, Vol. 161 No. 1 pp. 39–48, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/geng.2008.161.1.39
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