|
High Strain Dynamic Testing
When a hammer or drop weight strikes the
top of a foundation, a compressive stress wave travels down
its shaft at a speed c, which is a function of the elastic
modulus E and mass density. The impact induces a force F and a
particle velocity v at the top of the foundation. The force is
computed by multiplying the measured signals from a pair of
strain transducers attached near the top of the pile by the
pile area and modules. The velocity measurement is obtained by
integrating signals from a pair of accelerometers also
attached near the top of the pile. Strain transducers and
accelerometers are connected to a Pile Driving Analyzer®
(PDA), for signal processing and results.
As long as the wave travels in one
direction, force and velocity are proportional:
F = Zv,
where:
Z = EA/c is the pile impedance
E is the pile material modulus
of elasticity
A is the cross sectional area of
the pile
c is the material wave speed at
which the wave front travels
Soil resistance forces along the shaft and
at the toe cause wave reflections that travel and are felt at
the top of the foundation. The times at which these
reflections arrive at the pile top are related to their
location along the shaft. The measured force and velocity near
the pile top thus provide necessary and sufficient information
to estimate soil resistance and its distribution.
Total soil resistance computed by the PDA
includes both static and viscous components. The static
resistance can be obtained by subtracting the dynamic
component from the total soil resistance. The dynamic
component is computed as the product of the pile velocity
times a soil parameter called the Damping Factor. The damping
factor is an input to the PDA and is related to soil grain
size.
The energy delivered to the pile is
directly computed as the work done on the pile from the
integral of force times incremental displacement ( ∫Fdu
) which is easily evaluated as force times velocity integrated
over time ( ∫Fvdt ). Maximum compression stresses at the
pile top come directly from the measurements. The measurements
also allow direct computation of the compression stress at the
pile toe and the tension stresses along the shaft. Pile
integrity can be evaluated by inspecting the measurements for
early tension returns (caused by pile damage) prior to the
reflection from the pile toe; lack of such reflections assures
a pile with no defects.
High Strain Dynamic Testing encompasses
Dynamic Pile Monitoring and Dynamic Load Testing. Both are
covered by ASTM D4945. Pile Driving Monitoring consists of
using a PDA to perform real time evaluation of Case Method
capacity, energy transfer, driving stresses and pile integrity
for every blow. Dynamic Load Testing involves another
technique that evolved from Smith’s approach of modeling the
wave propagation theory of pile driving, the Case Pile Wave
Analysis Program (CAPWAP®).
CAPWAP combines field measurements (obtained with the PDA) and
wave-equation type analytical procedures to predict soil
behavior including static-load capacity, soil resistance
distribution, pile soil load transfer characteristics, soil
damping and quake values, and pile load versus movement plots
(e.g. a simulated static load test). CAPWAP analysis is made
on the PDA data after the test is complete.
|