Stone Column
Stone Column
Stone Column
Introduction
Stability
Concluding Remarks
Introduction
Definition of Columns
Pile effect
Transfer loads to a deeper and competent geo-material
Stress concentration
Drainage
Accelerate consolidation
Increase liquefaction resistance
Reinforcement
Increase shear, tensile, and/or bending resistance
Design Considerations
Load transfer
Slope stability
Rotation
direction
Courtesy of G. Zheng
Composite Columns
- Stiffened Deep Mixed Piles
Welding
Pile Column
Liu et al (2008)
DM
column
Ye et al (2008)
PVD
The Most Commonly Used Application
Column-supported Embankments
Geosynthetic-reinforced s0 Geosynthetics
fill platform
Embankment
s0
Columns
Ss Sc Ss Ss Sc Ss
Ec Es Ec Ec Es Ec
(a) Equal strain = rigid loading (b) Equal stress = flexible loading
Columns
Dc Ds S c = Ss Ec Es S c = Ss
dh
1-D unit cell Unit cell with lateral deformation
sc ss sz - (sx - sy) sz - (sx - sy)
z = = z = =
Dc Ds Ec Es
Dc Ec
n=
Ds > n
Es
Stress Concentration Ratio vs. Strain
Equal vertical strain condition
as =0.1 column
50 kc/kv=1
40 Ec/E
30 10
50
20
100
10 Semi-rigid
0
Flexible
0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000 100000
Time (days)
2040kPa
kPa
7
6
n = 1 + 0.217 (Ec /Es - 1) Cutoff ratio
5
for stone columns
4
Barksdale and Bachus (1983)
3
2
1
0
0 10 20 30 40
Modulus Ratio, Ec /Es
Stress Transfer
under Unequal Vertical Strain
Average vertical
Settlement, S(z) Shear stress, (z) stress, s(z)
Equal settlement
Fill (upper plane)
hc
at r = rc
Bearing layer Sc at r < rc sc at r < rc
z z z
Ss at r = re ss at r = re
W H
Hcr
ps T
d
Ec
sc ss Es
14 15 16 17 18
Embankment
1.3m
9 10 11 12 13
Optional 4 5 6 7 8
geogrid
1 2 3 0.3 m
Pile cap
5. Numerical method
Stress Reduction Factor Method
Settlement of untreated ground
s s m v ,s s z H
H/d e = 4
250 as = 0.1
k c/kv = 1
200 Numerical
150 Simplified
100
50
0
0 20 40 60 80 100
EEcc/E
/Es
Improvement 5 as
If 1 a s 1
factor 2 o
41 a s tan 45 c / 2
6 37.5
40
5 42.5
45
4
1
0 0,1 0,2 0,3 0,4 0,5
Area Replacement Ratio
Priebe (1995)
Elastic-Plastic Solution for
Stone Columns
Equivalent unimproved
zone thickness due to
column penetration
Area
replacement Improvement
ratio depth ratio
Pressure
strength ratio
Raft Atp
Eeq Es E p Es
Ag
Es
deq
Horikoshi and Randolph (1999)
Eeq
Ag
Pp Pr K p K r 1 2 cp Randolph (1984)
K pr
Spr 1 K r / K p cp
2
10m
0.8m
(a) Plan view 10m Settlement (cm)
Method
Group Equivalent pier
7.4m
Analytical 15.9 (16.9*)
15MN
Raft
0.5m Numerical 15.6 16.9
Lp =10m
DM columns
(Ep=100MPa) h = 30m * Without considering finite depth effect
(b) Cross section
Es=5MPa
p 8
Tr'
Fm' ( N )
Drainage surface Ur 1 e
Drainage surface r
re ' 1
c c r 1 n s 2
r
N 1
Degree of Consolidation
0
0.2
Barron (1947)
0.4
n=10 n=1
U
0.6
Balaam and Booker (1981) Free-draining
0.8
Han and Ye (2001)
stone column
1
0.0001 0.001 0.01 0.1
Tr
Khine (2004)
Dissipation of Excess Pore Pressure
1.0
Dissipation of Average Excess Pore 0.9
N=3, ns=5
0.8
Water Pressure, u/p
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
Due to drainage
0.2
0.1
0.0
0 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.1 0.12
Time Factor, Tr
10
20
Settlement (mm)
60
70
80
90
Han (2010)
Consolidation of Column-improved
Soft Foundation over Soft Soil
10
Average degree of consolidation (%) .
20
30
40
50 kc = ks
60
70 Ec/Es
80 5
10
90 50
100
100
0.0001 0.001 0.01 0.1 1
2
Time factor Tv=cv t/H
Columns
Soft soil Soft soil Columns
Columns
a b
Stone columns
Equivalent area
Clay Clay
Sand Sand
6
Numerical Bishop
5
4
Factor of Safety
3
Shear Bending Rotation
0
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
Cohesion of DM Walls (kPa)
Centrifuge Tests with Rigid Columns
Single column
Column group