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Effect of Ground Water Table

The document discusses the effect of groundwater table on bearing capacity of shallow foundations. It states that if the water table is located such that part of the potential failure mechanism is below it, higher pore pressures will exist in that zone, reducing the shear strength and bearing capacity. The appropriate unit weight to use in calculations depends on the depth of the water table relative to the base and depth of the foundation. The buoyant unit weight must be used if the water table is at or above the base. The material unit weight must be used if the water table is below the depth of the failure mechanism. An interpolation can be used for intermediate water table depths. It provides an example calculation of determining the equivalent unit weight to account for a

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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
193 views3 pages

Effect of Ground Water Table

The document discusses the effect of groundwater table on bearing capacity of shallow foundations. It states that if the water table is located such that part of the potential failure mechanism is below it, higher pore pressures will exist in that zone, reducing the shear strength and bearing capacity. The appropriate unit weight to use in calculations depends on the depth of the water table relative to the base and depth of the foundation. The buoyant unit weight must be used if the water table is at or above the base. The material unit weight must be used if the water table is below the depth of the failure mechanism. An interpolation can be used for intermediate water table depths. It provides an example calculation of determining the equivalent unit weight to account for a

Uploaded by

ahmed
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Effect of Ground Water Table

Courses > Foundation Analysis and Design > Bearing Capacity of Shallow Foundations
> Effect of Ground Water Table

Introduction

If the water table is located at an elevation such that part of the slip mechanism for the
footing would be below the water table, higher pore pressures will exist in that zoen,
implying lower shear strength and consequently lower bearing capacity. The effect of the
water table is best accounted for by suitably choosing the value of the weight for use in the
bearing capacity equation as the buoyant unit weight, the wet (or material) unit weight, or
some number in between.

Concepts and Formulas

The buoyant unit weight must be used if the groundwater table is at or above the base of the
footing (that is zw < D), for in this case the whole of the potential slip mechanism below the
footing base is under water. Since the depth of the slip mechanism is of the order of B below
the base of the foundation (that is, a total depth of D + B), if the water table is below this
depth, the material unit weight must be used. A simple interpolation can be used for water
table depths between D and D + B.

definitions:

zw = depth to the water table from ground

B = footing width

D = depth of embedment

 
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Solved sample problems

Example 1: Determination of equivalent unit weight of soil to calculate soil bearing


capacity with the effect of ground water table (English units)

Given:

 Moist unit weight of soil above ground water table: 120 lb/ft3.
 Moist content = 20%
 Friction angle,  = 25 degree
 Cohesion of soil above ground water table: 1000 lb/ft2.
 Cohesion of soil below ground water table: 500 lb/ft2.
 Footing: 8 feet wide square footing, bottom of footing at 2 ft below ground surface.
 Location of ground water table: 6 ft below ground water surface.

Requirement: Determine equivalent unit weight of soil to be used for calculating soil


bearing capacity.

Solution:

Determine equivalent unit weight:

Dry unit weight of soil, dry = m /(1+ ) = 120/(1+0.2) = 100 lb/ft3.

Volume of solid for 1 ft3 of soil, Vs = dry / (Gsw) = 100 / (2.65*62.4) = 0.6 ft3.

Volume of void for 1 ft3 of soil, Vv = 1-Vs=1-0.6=0.4 ft3.

Saturate unit weight of soil, sat = dry + w Vv = 100+62.4*0.4=125 ft3.

Buoyant unit weight of soil = sat - w = 125-62.4=62.6 ft3.

zw= 6 

D=2

B=8
D < zw < D + B

Thus, equivalent unit weight of soil:

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