Table of contents | |
Pore Water Pressure | |
The importance of drainage in reinforced clay fill | |
Designing drainage in geosynthetic-reinforced soil slopes | |
Tensar TensarTech wall and slope systems |
Pore water pressure is the pressure of groundwater held between soil or rocks in the gaps (or ‘pores’) between particles. It is affected by the soil type, water flow conditions and level of the water table. Pore pressure is important in geotechnical engineering as it influences soil behaviour, including its shear strength.
Ground movement and soil slope instability can be caused by changes in total stress and also by changes in pore pressure, such as after rainfall, when pore pressure can increase.
Geosynthetics are used in reinforced soil slopes using clay fill and, in some cases, reinforcement layers incorporate a geotextile drainage fabric, designed to reduce excess pore water pressure.
However, while this may be useful in very wet fill, in the more common situation where clay is compacted to normal earthworks specification, any regularly spaced fine drainage layers could actually allow water to penetrate well into the fill. This could increase pore pressure, causing swelling and softening, so is best avoided.
It is far better to incorporate internal drainage behind geogrid reinforcement. This will intercept groundwater flow and, when combined with adequate surface water drains to collect run-off, can reduce the risk of slope failure.
With 30 years of construction knowledge, design experience and innovative geogrid products, Tensar’s TensarTech permanent and temporary retaining wall and slope systems provide a number of facing types and construction options to suit the structure’s end use, location and required design life.
Our retaining wall solutions include precast concrete, dry-laid modular block systems (with the option of adding architectural, masonry or brick finishes); precast concrete panel systems; gabion and crib walls; and robust units suitable for aggressive marine environments. Our reinforced soil slope solutions can create vegetated slopes with angles of up to 70˚.
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350 videos|464 docs|2 tests
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