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Seepage and uplift pressure

Seepage and uplift pressure


What is it? Methods Blighs creep theory Lanes weighted creep theory Application

According to Blighs theory, water creeps along the bottom contour of the structure. The length of the path of water is called the length of creep The loss of head is proportional to the length of creep. The loss of head per unit of creep length is called the hydraulic gradient. (HL / L)

Blighs Creep Theory


The loss of head is proportional to the length of creep Dissipation of head per unit length of creep is constant throughout the seepage path. LBligh = CBligh . H
CB = Blighs coefficient of percolation

Your views on the theory? Blighs theory makes no discrimination between horizontal and vertical creeps.

Blighs Creep Theory


Safety against piping or undermining Sufficient creep length H/L < 1/C

Blighs Creep Theory


Safety against uplift pressure If the uplift head at any point is H1 (metres of water), then uplift head has to be counterbalanced by the weight of floor thickness. Weight of water upstream?

Example

Calculate hydraulic gradient and uplift pressure at point C Specific gravity of concrete is 2.4

Lanes weighted creep theory


Horizontal creep is less effective in reducing uplift than vertical creep. Lane suggested a factor of 1/3 for horizontal creep against 1 for the vertical creep. Calculate creep length using Lanes theory.

Definitions
Percolation is the flow of water under the ground
surface due to an applied differential head Percolation length (creep length) is the length to dissipate the total hydraulic pressure on the structure Undermining (Piping) is to carry away (wash) soil

particles with flowing water below the ground surface


causing collapse or failure of the above structure

A weir on solid rock (impervious foundation) does not need long apron (Floor), but needs sufficient width b to resist soil stresses.

A weir on pervious soil needs length L to: Cover creep or percolation length, Resist scour from falling water

L` = 2 t + L If L` > LB (Design is safe, no possibility of undermining) If L` < LB (Design is unsafe, undermining occurs, leads to failure)

L` = L + 2 t + 2 S1 + 2 S2 L` LB (design is safe, no possibility of undermining) L` < LB (design is unsafe, undermining occurs, leads to failure)

Distance between sheet piles a-a and b-b > d1 + d2 Water percolation length takes the right path, hence is safe

Distance between sheet piles a-a & b-b < d1 + d2 Water percolation length takes a short cut from a to b Actual percolation length is smaller than designed

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