PileGroup Validation - Example 6. Full scale static lateral load test of a 3 x 5 pile group in sand (Walsh 2005)
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This example is based on the full-scale lateral load test of a 3 × 5 pile group reported by Walsh (2005). The test site comprised alternating sand and clay layers. The piles were steel pipes with an outer diameter of 0.324 m and a wall thickness of 0.0095 m. In the direction of loading, the piles were spaced at 3.92D (1.27 m) centre-to-centre, and 3.29D (1.07 m) centre-to-centre perpendicular to the loading direction. Each pile had an embedded length of 16.6 m, with the groundwater table located 2.1 m below ground level. All pile heads were connected to the pile cap with free-head conditions. Lateral loads were applied to the pile heads through a jacking system positioned 0.48 m above the ground surface to produce prescribed horizontal deflections.

Walsh (2005) first simulated the single-pile test and calibrated the p–y curves by adjusting the soil parameters until the computed response matched the measured behaviour using LPILE program (Reese et al., 2000). The subsequent pile group tests were simulated using the computer program GROUP (Reese et al., 1996) with the calibrated p–y curves, incorporating row-dependent p-multipliers to account for group interaction effects. Based on the test data, the leading row exhibited the highest p-multiplier, while the trailing rows showed progressively smaller values. The reported p-multipliers were 1.0 for the leading row, 0.5 for the second row, 0.35 for the third row, 0.3 for the fourth row and 0.4 for the fifth row. The layout of the pile group is shown in Figure 6-1. The ground profile and soil properties adopted in this example are shown in the table below.

The figure below shows the three-dimensional view of this 3 x 5 pile group modelled in the PileGroup program.

The figure below shows the soil layer information, pile group and pile cap loads defined in the program. It shows the thickness values for all the layers and also the pile lengths.

For this example, the pile group effect option “User-specified p-multipliers for pile group effect” was adopted. According to Walsh (2005), the p-multiplier values were taken as 1.0 for the leading row, 0.5 for the second row, 0.35 for the third row, 0.3 for the fourth row and 0.4 for the fifth row. The adopted p-multipliers for all piles within the group are illustrated in Figure 6-4.

Figure 6-5 presents a comparison of the pile head displacement curves for the 3 × 5 pile group under lateral loading. Figure 6-6 shows the comparison of the pile head force displacement curves for the front row (Row 1) piles. The results obtained from the analysis using the PileGroup program are shown together with the measured field data and the predictions reported by Walsh (2005) using GROUP program. The numerical predictions from PileGroup show good agreement with both the experimental measurements and GROUP predictions across the entire load–displacement range.
Figures 6-7 to 6-9 present comparisons of bending-moment profiles along the pile length with corresponding PileGroup predictions for the front row under various imposed pile-head movements, showing very close agreement with the measured test data and with GROUP results reported by Walsh (2005).





References:
Reese, L. C., and Wang, J. T. (1996). GROUP: A Computer Program for Analysis of Laterally Loaded Piles and Pile Groups. Report/Program, University of Texas at Austin, Center for Transportation Research.
Reese, L. C., Isenhower, W. M., and Wang, S. T. (2000). LPile Plus Version 4.0M: A Program for Analysis of Laterally Loaded Piles Using p-y Curves. Ensoft, Inc., Houston, TX.
Walsh, J. M. (2005). Full-Scale Lateral Load Test of a 3×5 Pile Group in Sand. M.S. thesis, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, USA.


























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