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Design and Construction of Three Instrumented Test Piles to Examine Time Dependent Pile Capacity Gain
18
Citations
5
References
2004
Year
Electrical ResistanceEngineeringMechanical EngineeringSoil-structure InteractionStructural EngineeringGeotechnical EngineeringGeotechnical ProblemExperimental TestingTest PilesEarthquake EngineeringFoundation EngineeringLoad-bearing CapacityPile Capacity GainEngineering GeologyConstruction OperationsGeotechnical PropertyCivil EngineeringGeomechanicsConstruction ManagementConstruction Engineering
Abstract Three heavily instrumented test piles were designed, constructed, and installed at a bridge reconstruction site in Newbury, Massachusetts as part of a research initiative into time dependent pile capacity gain. Pile instrumentation consisted primarily of an alternating pattern of piezometers and strain gages, allowing for correlation between pile capacity gain and excess pore pressure dissipation along discrete pile segments. Additional instrumentation within the piles included accelerometers, telltales, and radial pressure cells, allowing monitoring of total pressure at the pile wall. Standard dynamic gages (strain gages and accelerometers) were also attached to the piles during dynamic testing. A total of 86 vibrating wire, 17 electrical resistance, 17 telltales, and 4 piezo-resistive gages were installed within the test piles to record strain, displacement, pressure, and acceleration. This paper describes (i) the initial installation location of the test piles, (ii) the design and layout of the individual test piles, (iii) the selection and installation design of the individual instrumentation within the test piles, and (iv) assembly of the test piles. Sample measurements of the various instruments and a summary of the instrumentation performance are also presented.
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