CA2190212A1 - Method of preventing charges in the nature of viscous ground found in the foundation created for roads, banks or the like, and of preventing earthquake disaster - Google Patents

Method of preventing charges in the nature of viscous ground found in the foundation created for roads, banks or the like, and of preventing earthquake disaster

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Publication number
CA2190212A1
CA2190212A1 CA002190212A CA2190212A CA2190212A1 CA 2190212 A1 CA2190212 A1 CA 2190212A1 CA 002190212 A CA002190212 A CA 002190212A CA 2190212 A CA2190212 A CA 2190212A CA 2190212 A1 CA2190212 A1 CA 2190212A1
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CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
ground
consolidation
stress
piling
reconstructed
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
CA002190212A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Yuichiro Takahashi
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Takao Enterprise Co Ltd
Original Assignee
Takao Enterprise Co Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from JP7322396A external-priority patent/JPH09143973A/en
Application filed by Takao Enterprise Co Ltd filed Critical Takao Enterprise Co Ltd
Publication of CA2190212A1 publication Critical patent/CA2190212A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02DFOUNDATIONS; EXCAVATIONS; EMBANKMENTS; UNDERGROUND OR UNDERWATER STRUCTURES
    • E02D3/00Improving or preserving soil or rock, e.g. preserving permafrost soil
    • E02D3/12Consolidating by placing solidifying or pore-filling substances in the soil
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02DFOUNDATIONS; EXCAVATIONS; EMBANKMENTS; UNDERGROUND OR UNDERWATER STRUCTURES
    • E02D1/00Investigation of foundation soil in situ
    • E02D1/02Investigation of foundation soil in situ before construction work
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02DFOUNDATIONS; EXCAVATIONS; EMBANKMENTS; UNDERGROUND OR UNDERWATER STRUCTURES
    • E02D2250/00Production methods
    • E02D2250/003Injection of material

Abstract

The invention provides method of preventing changes in the nature of a ground wherein, with a consolidation yield stress profile lying within a pre-consolidation region on or above a profile line of an effective soil covering stress of a ground with a piling structure laid thereon, said effective soil covering stress of said ground with a piling structure laid thereon being calculated with respect to a foundation ground on which a piling structure is scheduled to be laid, by plotting an effective soil covering stress profile of an original ground and using said profile line as reference, on condition that a load of said piling structure is transmitted as such through said original ground, soil forming a ground to be reconstructed is improved without disturbing said ground to be reconstructed, and said ground to be reconstructed is in situ subjected to a single concurrent operation involving four principles for reconstruction of a soft ground, (1) consolidation and dehydration, (2) drainage, (3) solidification, and (4) replacement (called an instantaneous consolidation method), so that the ground can be improved within 24 hours, thereby preventing subsidence of said ground due to consolidation, and deformation and displacement of surrounding ground layers or structures built up thereon.

Description

21902 1~ /
~ 1 --~OEl~OD OF rKIsvL .~ lN6~ OEANGES IN ~Lll~i NATCIKE OF VISCOIJS
GROlJr~v FOl~ IN 1~; FO~NDATION CREATED FOR ROADS, BANRS OR
T~IE LIRE, AND OF ~usv~ lNG EAKl-~QuARE DISASTER
The present invention relates to a method of preventing changes in the nature of viscous ground found in the foundation created for roads, banks or the like, and a method of prevention of earthquake disasters as well.
For Japan or a small country having limited open fields, techniques of how soft ground is improved or reconstructed are increasingly important for developing industrial infrastructures such as water fronts, and slope fronts, and putting them in good condition. Recently steady increases in the number of traffic vehicles, combined with their size increases, pose problems that must be urgently solved; it is required to put existing road networks immediately in good condition, and to repair, structurally improve or reconstruct, and widen available roads ranging from principal to local roads, with additional requirement for creating new roads.
In recent years, it has been pointed out that the Japanese Islands may be at the active stage of earthquakes due to the fact that earthquakes, whether small or big in magnitude, occur frequently at all parts of the country. In view of social considerations, how seismic diasters are effectively prevented is an urgent problem.
U.S. Patent No. 4,309,129 issued January 5, 1982 to Y.
Takahashi describes a method and apparatus for improving the strength of soft viscous ground. The method involves injecting a hardenable liquid (ie. a cement milk) into each of a number of selected points in the ground. U.S. Patent No. 4,540,316 issued September 10, 1985 to the same inventor also discloses a method of improving soft ground f or buil ding purposes.
Conventional techniques taking aim at improving ground-constituting soil itself include a piling method designed to consolidate and drain soft ground by a piling structure placed thereon, so that the soft ground can be improved and reinforced, and a combined piling and drainage method designed to reduce consolidation time as much as possible.
-2- Zl~Q212 , However, the piling method or the combined piling and drainage method takes several months to several years for an 80% consolidation, although depending on the soil properties of soft ground, and needs much labor, time, and cost for ground maintenance and control. One leading reason is that several piling operations must be performed step by step until as-planned height is reached because when a given piling structure is at once laid on the soft ground, surrounding ground layers or structures built up on them are deformed or displaced due to its sliding destruction, and another reason is that long times are needed to make the soft ground stable with respect to settlement or subsidence, sliding destruction, and nature changes. Another defect of these methods is that much difficulty is involved in their application to ground found at residential quarters and marshland, along rivers, and at slopes, or ground disturbed as by earthquakes. In view of design, management and construction control considerations, the amount and time of subsidence may be theoretically estimated or predicted but, in many instances, practice differs from theory.
Accordingly, whenever the movement of the piling structure placed on the soft ground is observed for a certain period, what form and condition the ground subsides in must be found.
However, there is still no effective design or control procedures capable of being practiced within a short period of time.
A particular problem with the piling method is that it is pnmafaceeffective for temporarily bringing ground disturbed by sliding destruction, earthquakes, or the like back to the old condition provided that the height of the soiling structure thereon lies within a certain range, but it is not suited for permanently recovering or enhancing the strength of disturbed ground, or preventing seismic disasters.
A piling structure laid on soft ground must be normally stable with respect to piling loads, and dynamic loads and vibrations produced by traffic loads. In addition to such piling, and traffic loads, the piling structure must also resist vibrations produced by an earthquake.

_ -3- 2 19 a 2 1 2 An essential requirement for achieving the stabilization of such a piling structure is to improve the property of the soil forming the piling soil structure and the foundation without disturbing them, so that the strength needed for design and construction can be instantaneously created, thereby constituting a homogeneous pre-consolidated (over-consolidated) ground layer in which the piling structure is united with the foundation.
A primary object of the present invention is to provide a consistent solution to the following five problems the aforesaid conventional piling methods involve in connection with (1) consolidation or construction time, (2) construction environment, (3) design management, and construction control, (4) restoration of ground disturbed by sliding destruction, and ground or structures damaged by an earthquake, and (5) applicability to prevention of ground and structures against disaster.

The present invention has been accomplished with the aforesaid object in mind, and is basically characterized by improving the nature of the soil of the ground to be reconstructed while the ground is not disturbed at all, using an instantaneous consolidation method, so that the ground can be insi~ reconstructed within 24 hours in an instantaneous operation on the basis of four basic principles for soft ground improvement, viz., (1) consolidation and dehydration, (2) drainage, (3) solidification, and (4) replacement. The present invention is also applicable to (1) every soft ground inclusive of natural stratified ground, man-made ground, and ground disturbed by destruction, (2) free creation of the required strength over the range needed in view of design and construction according to a ground improvement plan, (3) restoration and reinforcement of ground disturbed by destruction, and (4) prevention of ground and structures again seismic disasters. Thus, the present invention provides a technique that makes use of the effective soil covering stress of the original ground to reconstruct it into -4- 219021~

a stable ground layer capable of resisting piling loads, traffic loads, and vibration loads additionally applied to the original ground.

In the dra~ings, FIG. 1 illustrates a process wherein using a specific impregnation machine, a specifically formulated impregnation material is injected into ground by a consolidation impregnation method controlled according to the design and construction standards, so that there can be obtained a homogeneously stable yet complex ground zone in which a solidified portion is united with an over-consolidated portion obtained by compression effect due to in-situ dehydration and drainage by consolidation, and post-injection in-situ replacement and solidification effect.
FIG. 2 illustrates a process wherein by effecting the aforesaid consolidation impregnation method using the impregnation material being injected as a load in place of a piling or other load, a soft and viscous ground zone or a loose sandy ground zone can be destroyed to form crevices therein.
FIG. 3 illustrates a process wherein with a further continued injection of the impregnation material on the same breaking criteria, the ground zone is successively destroyed to cause quantitative and qualitative growth of the crevices, so that the impregnation material starts to flow while the crevices are filled therewith, thereby creating a sheet form of fluid body in an oblique or vertical direction.
FIG. 4 illustrates a process where while the fluid body flows through passages and grows, ground portions contiguous to the breaking interfaces are insitu subjected to forcibly rapid loading and dehydration actions in a transverse direction.
FIG. 5 illustrates a process wherein by the in-situ loading and dehydration actions of the fluid body, pore water is entrained, simultaneously with the injection of the impregnation material, from the ground to be consolidated into the fluid body, and then dynamically discharged, and during the injection of the impregnation material, the water is discharged mainly through water discharge passages formed by boundaries between the ground to be consolidated and the fluid body, and then discharged into underground, and ground-surface sand layers together with water separated from theimpregnation material. FIG. 6 illustrates a process where by a chain effect of the fluid body on in-situ loading, dehydration and drainage, the ground to be improved can be instantaneously consolidated without being disturbed at all, resulting in a successive ground strength increase, and the fluid body itself is solidified within 24 hours in its as-injected state to create an in-situ solidified replacement skeleton structure in the ground to be consolidated.
FIG. 7 is diagram showing the relation between consolidation yield stress and pre-consolidation stress.
FIG. 8 illustrates in section a plan for the creation of a road with a low piling structure laid thereon.
FIG. 9 a table showing the nature of the soil forming the ground to be reconstructed, and a profile diagram showing the effective soil covering stress profile of a piling structure.
FIG. 10 is a diagram showing the relation between penetration resistance values obtained by Swedish sounding tests performed at a depth of up to 5 meters and undrained shearing strength values (for the reconstructed ground) obtained by vane shear tests.
FIG. 11 is diagrams for making estimation of the effect on ground improvement by cone penetration tests using a portable cone penetrometer.
FIG. 12 is a diagram showing the relation between consolidation yield s~ress Pc and pre-consolidation stress Pc', both in tf/m2, to thereby illustrate the first results of the reconstructed peat ground.
FIGS. 13a and 13b are diagrams showing the second results of the reconstructed peat ground.
FIGS. 14a and 14b are diagrams showing the third results of the reconstructed peat ground.

- 219~212 -FIG. 15 is a table showing the constituent of the soil forming the ground to be reconstructed, and a diagram showing a plan for reconstructing a road with a low piling structure laid thereon.
FIG. 16 is a diagram providing an illustration of how a piling structure subsides.
FIG. 17 is a diagram showing the effective soil covering stress profile of piled ground (clay of marine origin), and the results of ground improvement.
FIG. 18 is a diagram showing the relation between pre-consolidation stress Pc' and undrained shearing strength Cu (of clay of marine origin).
FIG. 19 is a diagram showing the effective soil covering stresses of the original ground (clay of river origin) and piled ground, the consolidation yield stress of the original ground, and the consolidation yield stress of the original ground (clay of river origin) upon reconstructed.
FIG. 20 is a diagram providing an illustration of how the ground subsides during reconstruction, and after reconstruction.
FIG. 21 is a diagram showing the void ratio of undrained shearing strength of the ground before and after reconstruction.

The present invention will now be explained at great length with reference to the accompanying drawings.
When earth, or a piling structure is laid on the surface of land or structures are built up on the surface of land, newly added loads are transmitted through the ground.
Stresses produced by the transmission of the loads through the ground often cause ground settlement or subsidence, and if the loads exceed a certain limitation, the ground will then be destroyed.
Accordingly, when it is attempted to investigate ground destruction or ground settlement, it is required to learn stress occurring at a certain depth of the ground due to the ~7- 2 1 ~ ~ 2 1 2 -weight of soil, and the magnitude of stress increased by newly added loads such as traffic, and seismic loads.
Pressure that a horizontal plane at a certain depth of ground receives by the weight of soil placed above it is called soil covering pressure or stress.
When soil exists above a ground water level, on the one hand, soil covering pressure ~z is given by ~ z = ~ x Z ttf/m2~
where ~ is the unit volume weight of soil, and Z is depth.
When soil exists below a ground water level, on the other hand, soil covering pressure ~z'is given by ~ Z = Ysub x Z ( tf/m2) where Ysub is the submerged unit volume weight of soil obtained by subtracting buoyancy from the unit volume weight of soil, and Z is depth. The pressure ~z' is a sort of pressure transmitted directly between soil particles, and called effective stress. The soil covering pressure (stress) represented in terms of effective stress is then called effective soil covering pressure (stress).
An undisturbed viscous soil sample gathered from ground at a certain depth is subjected to consolidation testing, while incremental loads are added thereto. Void ratios are plotted per loading, with void ratio on an arithmetic scale as ordinate and consolidation load on a semi-logarithmic scale as abscissa. It is then found that at the initial loading stage the void ratio e decreases following a gentle curve; upon a certain load exceeded, however, it decreases sharply from that gentle curve, and changes in a linear form.
This point of inflection, viz., consolidation load under which soil is shifted from an elastic phase into a plastic phase is referred to as consolidation yield stress ~. In the case of naturally stratified, saturated ground, the consolidation yield point is often in substantial agreement with the maximum consolidation load the ground have received in the past. When a load less than such load is applied to the ground, there is little, if any, ground settlement.
This invention provides a ground improving method capable of creating ground unlikely to subside by means of -8- 2 1 ~0 2 1l~
-the aforesaid instantaneous consolidation technique, according to which impregnation of ground can be used in place of loading such as pilling based on the consolidation principles mentioned above.
When the consolidation yield stress ~ of soil at a given depth of ground is equal to the soil covering pressure that soil receives currently, that soil is referred to as soil that has been subjected to normal consolidation. When the consolidation yield pressure ~ is larger than the soil covering pressure that soil receives currently, that soil is referred to as soil that has been subjected to over consolidation, indicating that it has so far been subjected to load larger than that receiving currently.
It is believed that leading reasons for over consolidation are that, in the past, soil has been exposed to load larger than the current soil covering load, a repeated cycle of drying or dry-wetting, a large ground water level change, and the action of gluey substances.
At present, practically feasible means for over-consolidating ground having a certain depth is to apply aload larger than the current soil covering pressure to that ground by piling or other loading methods. As already mentioned, however, it is difficult to create ground having a high degree of over consolidation within a very short period of time by piling or other loading methods, and it is nearly impossible to instantaneously achieve the strength required for design and construction over the range needed for the ground to be over-consolidated, using available piling methods. Nonetheless, there is still no alternative with the exception of piling or other loading methods.
This invention provides a technique which enables over-consolidated soil ( ground) having the required strength to be instantaneously created at the depth, and over the range, needed for design, using the instantaneous consolidation method.
The application of the aforesaid means makes it possible to create homogeneous pre-consolidated ground (over-consolidated ground) comprising an integral structure of the -9- ~1902~2 -foundation and a piling structure laid thereon. The term "pre-consolidated ground" used herein is understood to refer to improved and reinforced ground which can resist every external force newly added to the effective soil covering pressure of the original ground, for instance, static loads produced by a piling structure laid thereon or structures built up thereon, dynamic loads produced by traffic vehicles, and loads produced by vibrations, and earthquakes.
The present invention will now be explained in further detail with reference to some examples.
In the instantaneous consolidation method by impregnation of ground which is practiced according to predetermined design for ground improvement, a predetermined amount of one impregnation material selected from the group consisting of mortar material, cement material, and a mixture of mortar and cement materials is injected at a predetermined pressure into very soft, viscous ground or loose sandy ground through a preselected array of injection points.
Simultaneously with impregnation, the soft ground is destroyed to form crevices therein, which are then filled with the impregnation material. In such an impregnation process, both the amount of the material impregnated and the impregnation pressure are controlled according to the aforesaid design, so that the end degree of consolidation can be instantaneously achieved.
(1) Some load is required to improve the nature of ground itself to take effect on its consolidation, and so piling or other loading means have been used so far in the art. In the inventive method, however, such consolidation effect is achieved by the impregnation material injected into the ground, which is tantamount to the piling structure (soil) laid on the ground, and the impregnation pressure which is tantamount to the load corresponding to the thickness of the soil laid on the ground. See FIGS. 1 to 5.
(2) By consolidation, the ground is so dehydrated that pore water is discharged. For this reason, natural drainage due to a soil load applied on the ground has conventionally been used alone or in combination with a drain. In the -lO- 2190212 -inventive method, however, the impregnation material being injected into the ground is used as dehydration and discharge means.

Example 1 - Instantaneous consolidation method by impreqnation of qround.
(i) Using a specific impregnation machine, a specifically formulated impregnation material is injected into ground by the consolidation impregnation method controlled according to the design and construction standards to be described later. Through the mechanisms explained in (2)-(6) below and shown in FIGS. 2-6, there can be obtained a homogeneously stable yet complex ground zone in which a solidified portion is united with an over-consolidated portion obtained by compression effect due to in-situ dehydration and drainage by consolidation, and post-injection in-situ replacement and solidification effect. See FIG. 1.
(ii) By effecting the aforesaid consolidation impregnation using the impregnation material being injected as a load in place of a piling or other load, a soft and viscous ground zone or a loose sandy ground zone can be destroyed to form crevices therein. See FIG. 2.
(iii) With a further continued injection of the impregnation material on the same breaking criteria, the ground zone is successively destroyed to cause quantitative and qualitative growth of the crevices, so that the impregnation material starts to flow while the crevices are filled therewith, thereby creating a sheet form of fluid body in an oblique or vertical direction. See FIG. 3.
(iv) While the fluid body flows through passages and grows, ground portions contiguous to the breaking interfaces are insi~ subjected to fo~cibly rapid loading and dehydration actions in a transverse direction. See FIG. 4.
(v) By the in-situ loading and dehydration actions of the fluid body, pore water is entrained, simultaneously with the injection of the impregnation material, from the ground to be consolidated into the fluid body, and then dynamically discharged. During the injection of the impregnation -11- 21i90~12 -material, the water is discharged mainly through water discharge passages formed by boundaries between the ground to be consolidated and the fluid body, and then discharged into underground, and ground-surface sand layers together with water separated from the impregnation material. See FIG. 5.
(vi) By a chain effect of the fluid body on in-situ loading, dehydration and drainage, the ground to be improved can be instantaneously consolidated without being disturbed at all, resulting in a successive ground strength increase.
On the other hand, the fluid body itself is solidified within 24 hours in its as-injected state to create an in-situ solidified replacement skeleton structure in the ground to be consolidated. See FIG. 6.
FIG. 7 clarifies the effect of the inventive instantaneous consolidation method by impregnation of ground through an accumulation of experimental data.
In FIG. 7, the numbers on the abscissa indicate a consolidation load or, more exactly, the consolidation yield stress Pc of the original ground found by soil testing, and the consolidation yield stress, again found by soil testing, of the ground improved by the application of the inventive method of impregnation of ground. In FIG. 7, the latter consolidation yield stress is denoted as pre-consolidation stress Pc' to define around the former consolidation yield stress. The numbers on the left ordinate stand for void ratio e and a compression index Cc while the numbers on the right ordinate represent undrained shearing strength Cu.
Data on void ratio e, compression index Cc, and undrained shearing strength Cu of the ground before and after reconstruction are plotted with respect to the consolidation load on the abscissa. White symbols refer to the original ground before and after reconstruction, and ground with soil laid on it, while black symbols refer to the ground after reconstruction. It is here to be noted that the ground with a soiling structure laid on it was created before seven years with a piling structure of 4.5 meters in height.

-12- 2190~ 2 Example 2 - Peat qround FIG. 8 shows a road widening project in section for a given road with a new piling structure placed on an adjoining rice field, and penetration resistance values of the ground before and after reconstruction for the purpose of comparison. FIG. 9 illustrates the soil constitution of the ground to be improved, the effective soil covering stress, consolidation yield stress, and pre-consolidation stress profiles of the ground to be improved, and ground with a piling structure laid on it.

(1) Soil constitution of the qround to be reconstructed, and ranqe for makinq investiqation of how soft qround is improved As can be seen from FIG. 9, the ground to be reconstructed includes a surface soil layer of 0.6 meters in thickness, beneath which highly compressible, very soft, and organic viscous soil composed mainly of peat or humus soil is distributed at a thickness of about 4.0 meters, and a relatively rigid and hard subsoil layer composed of alternate sub-layers of sandy soil, silt soil, and viscous and sandy soils. In view of design and construction considerations, therefore, the very soft layer having a depth of about 4.0 meters must be reconstructed.

(2) Non-consolidated qround, normally consolidated qround, and pre-consolidated qround Referring here to general stratified ground, the maximum load that the ground has so far received, for instance, through accumulated loads of deposits constituting the ground is consolidation yield stress ~ and, in many cases, the profile of consolidation yield stress ~ within the ground is in substantial agreement with that of the effective soil covering stress of the original ground. When a fresh piling structure is placed on the original ground, a load produced thereby causes the profile line of consolidation yield stress ~ of the original ground to become close to that of the piled -13- ~1 9 n2 1 2 ground layer with the progress of consolidation. Therefore, the piled ground layer continues to subside until the profile line of the consolidation yield stress of the original ground coincides with that of the effective soil covering stress of the piled ground layer. However, if the consolidation yield stress of the improved ground obtained by the inventive method, viz., the value of pre-consolidation stress Pc' is set on or above the profile line of the effective soil covering stress of the piled ground layer, any ground subsidence would not theoretically occur. Indeed, the thus improved pre-consolidated ground is observed to undergo no subsidence at all, or an allowable, if any, degree of subsidence, and is found to be effective for earthquakes as well.
Basically, such concepts underlie the present invention;
it is the inventive method of stabilizing piled ground, or ground with a low piling structure placed on it that enables pre-consolidation stress Pc' of the soft ground to be reconstructed to be set on or above the profile line of the effective soil covering stress produced by piling, traffic, and seismic loads.
(3) Estimation of traffic loads on pilinq structure accordinq to the invention Loads, if produced by piling, can be well detected.
However, traffic loads, for which there is still no established estimation method, may be measured in the present invention, as follows.
To improve the soil of the ground to be reconstructed while the ground is kept undisturbed, there is still nothing but a piling method according to which the ground is dehydrated using a piling or other load, so that pore water can be discharged from the ground for the purpose of consolidation. In this piling method, the following equation (1) is used:
Cu'=Cu+ m'(Po+ U~P) (1) where Cu' is the undrained shearing strength of the consolidated ground, Cu is the undrained shearing strength of the -original ground, Po is the effective soil covering stress of the original ground, m' is a percentage of strength increase due to the consolidation load of the piling structure, and U is the degree of consolidation under investigation of the piling consolidation load of the piling structure.
The inventive method is distinguishable over the prior art in the following points.
(i) If a piling structure is placed on soft ground, several months to several years are then taken for an 80%
consolidation, as already mentioned. Consequently, the degree of consolidation U is determined depending on how many days elapses after consolidation. For instance, given the strength achieved by an 80% consolidation, then U = 0.8. In the inventive instantaneous consolidation method, by contrast, U = 1.0 for every ground irrespective of when the degree of consolidation is investigated.
(ii) Symbol m' is the percentage of strength increase due to the piling consolidation load. If the percentage of strength increase is found at the time of piling, it is then required to gather a soil sample from the ground under investigation, and subject it to indoor soil testing, i.e., uniface shear (consolidation undrained) testing or triaxial compression (consolidation undrained) testing. This is also true of when the percentage of strength increase is measured during piling works. Thus, it is required to perform soil testing for each piling. No target strength is obtained without pressurization at the consolidation load needed in view of design. In the inventive method, on the contrary, empirical values have been predetermined through experimentation per ground, viz., for peat or humus ground, clay ground of marine origin, and clay ground of river origin, respectively. Thus, the inventive method can be instantaneously effected using the predetermined strength needed in view of design.

(iii) Conventional methods are performed on the basis of the effective soil covering stress Po of the original ground.
Strictly speaking, however, much difficulty is involved in the precise calculation of the effective soil covering stress of the original ground. In the inventive method, on the contrary, design, and construction precision is high because the inventive method can be practiced on the basis of the consolidation yield stress Pc.
~iv) In the matter of the present invention, ~P is the consolidation yield stress (pre-consolidated stress) of the ground improved by impregnation of ground, as already noted, and can be calculated in the form of the target value for compressibility improvement, as designed.
In the inventive method, it is essentially important that Cu'= Cu+ m(Pd-Pc) ~-- (2) where Cu is the undrained shearing strength in tf/m2 of the original ground, Cu' is the undrained shearing strength in tf/m2 of the ground upon improved, Pc is the consolidation yield stress in tf/m2 of the original ground, Pd is the consolidation stress in tf/m2 needed to obtain the undrained shearing st~ength Cu' in tf/m2 of the ground upon improved or the pre-consolidated stress Pc' in tf/m2 of the ground upon improved, and m is the percentage of strength increase due to the piling consolidation stress.
In equation (2), the soil constants of the original ground are defined by Cu - 1.5 tf/m2, and Pc = 5.0 tf/m2.
~ese soil constants may be found by subjecting the original ground to consolidation testing, triaxial compression or uniface shear testing by non-consolidation undrained testing, uniaxial compression testing, or vane shear testing.
Accordingly, if the percentage of strength increase m and the target value Cu' for ground improvement are determined, the consolidation stress Pd (or the pre-consolidation stress Pc' of -16- 219021~

the ground upon improved) can then be used to calculate the height of the piling structure of soil as the traffic load.
From the results of experimentation using the inventive method, shown in FIG. 12, m = 0.4 is chosen from the range of m = 0.39 to m = 0.42.
Of importance is here how to determine the target value Cu' for ground improvement. If a follow-up survey is run on the current stability (the amount of road subsidence, and whether or not surrounding ground layers or structures built up thereon are deformed and displaced, and if so, to what degree?) of an existing road with a low piling structure placed on it, which is laid on peat ground identical with, or similar to, the ground under investigation in terms of soil constitution, soil nature, soil constants, and thicknesses of layers, as well as on the strength and compressibility properties of the piling structure and the foundation, it is then possible to clarify or estimate the stability and conditions for stability of, and problems with, the ground under investigation.
The results of follow-up surveys run so far on existing roads with low piling structures laid on them reveal that (1) the mean value of the undrained shearing strength is Cu' = 2.5 tf/m2 for some roads found to undergo slight subsidence and little soil nature changes but offer no particular obstacle to the traveling of vehicles thereon, and (2) the undrained shearing strength is Cu' > 3.0 tf/m2 for some roads observed to undergo little, if any, subsidence and soil nature changes or to be kept stable. See FIGS. 12, 13, and 14.
On the basis of these results of surveys, now assume that the reference value for the undrained shearing strength for the roads as mentioned in (1) above is Cu' = 2.5 tf/m2.
Then, the consolidation stress Pd (pre-consolidation stress Pc') with respect to this reference value is found by Pd=(Cu'-Cu+ m ~Pc)/m (3) Substitution of Cu' = 2.5 tf/m2, Cu = 1.5 tf/m2, Pc = 5.0 tf/m2, and m = 0.4 into equation (3) gives Pd = (2.5 - 1.5 + 0.4 x 5.0)/0.4 = 7.5 tf/m2 For the stably maintained roads, too, assume that the reference value for the undrained shearing strength is Cu' =
3.0 tf/m2. Then, the consolidation stress Pd (pre-consolidation stress Pc') with respect to this reference value is also found by equation (3).
That is to say, substitution of Cu' = 3.0 tf/m2, Cu = 1.5 tf/m2, ~ = 5.0 tf/m2, and m = 0.4 into equation (3) gives Pd = (3.0 - 1.5 + 0.4 x 5.0)/0.4 = 8.75 tf/m2 In FIG. 9, curves 3 and 4 show underground stress profiles wherein the consolidation stresses Pd (pre-consolidation stresses Pc') as calculated above are distributed in the ground to be reconstructed, correspondlng to the effective soil covering stress of the original ground.
Here, assume that the unit volume weight of the piling structure is yt = 1.8 tf/m2. For the case as set forth in (1) above, pile height as calculated as traffic loads is 2.5 meters if pile height as planned is 1.0 meter, and for the case as set forth in (2) above, pile height as calculated as traffic loads is 3.2 meters if pile height as planned is 1.0 meter.
(4) Results of construction works accordinq to the invention In exemplary construction works shown in FIGS. 8 and 9, the resulting effects were ascertained and estimated firstly by Swedish sounding tests, and secondly by subjecting typical spots to vane shearing tests, penetration tests using a portable cone penetrometer, and Dutch double-pipe cone penetration tests for the purpose of comparison. The results are shown in FIG. 10. The resulting empirical equation from the relation between the undrained shearing strength (found by the vane shearing tests ) and penetration resistance values Wsw obtained in the Swedish sounding tests is Cu' = 0.04 Wsw While design management and construction control were effected using such penetration resistance values, construction works were performed at Cu' > 3.0 tf/m2 for portions of structures built up on ground, and at Cu' > 2.5 -18- 2190~ 2 tf/m2 for other portions. After the completion of the construction works, neither subsidence nor changes in the nature of the soil were observed.
(5) Influences of seismic vibrations Much is still unknown or unsettled about earthquake scales, and the form, type, magnitude, frequency, and time of seismic vibrations, and so influences of all seismic vibrations cannot be established or predicted. At least, however, inventor's experience teaches that grounds with an improved undrained shearing strength of Cu' > 3.0-4.0 tf/m2 have been hardly hit by earthquakes having a seismic intensity of 4 to 5. If general piled grounds, grounds on which low piling structures are laid and which receive traffic loads, and piling structures and foundations of filled-up grounds are improved such that their undrained shearing strengths are Cu' > 3.0-4.0 tf/m2, it will then be expected that they are not damaged by earthquakes or, if hit, suffer from a minimum damage.
Example 3 - Clay qround of marine oriqin One example is explained, wherein the inventive method is applied to prevent changes of underground pipes due to consolidation subsidence of a low piling structure laid on ground composed of clay of marine origin and residual subsidence thereof due to traffic loads.

(i) The nature of the soil forminq the qround to be reconstructed Deposits constituting the ground to be reconstructed are mainly composed of a very soft clay layer of marine origin and of about 10 meters in thickness, with diluvial hard clay and sand soil distributed beneath it.

(ii) Construction history of pilinq structure and sewers Subsidence of the piling structure placed on such ground - after the sewers laid underground proceeded as shown in FIG.
16, and the amount of subsidence of the piling structure 19- ~1902 ~'2 reached about 170 centimeters about six years after piling.
At this time, the amount of subsidence of the sewers exceeded the allowable amount of subsidence of 20 centimeters, posing a serious obstacle to the function of sewerage and the structure of the sewers.

(iii) Estimation of effect on qround improvement The results of effect of the inventive method on low piling structures are concisely illustrated in FIGS. 17 and 18, from which it is found that the effect on ground improvement was achieved as initially planned.
Never until now was any subsidence observed. It is also observed that the sewers are neither damaged nor deformed.
In the meantime, the ground was hit by earthquakes having a seismic intensity of 3 to 4, but was kept in good condition.

Example 4 - Clay of river oriqin One example of this inventive method is explained, wherein the inventive method is applied to soft ground composed of clay of river origin, on which a high piling structure of 4.0 meters is placed to construct a railway.

(i) The nature of the soil constitutinq the qround to be reconstructed Deposits constituting the ground to be reconstructed form a very soft ground layer of about 4.8 meters in thickness and composed mainly of clay of river origin, beneath which there is a layer composed of a gravel-containing sand layer having a relatively high density.
(ii) Construction history of pilinq structure and sewers A sand mat of 0.4 meters in thickness was placed on ground, and a first piling structure having a critical height of 1.5 meters was laid on the sand mat. After the lapse of 22 days during which they were allowed to stand, the ground was reconstructed by the inventive method and, in three days later during which the ground was let alone, a second piling structure of 2.5 meters in height was laid on the ground. In -20- ~i902~ 2 this way, the ground was rapidly reconstructed within a total period of 27 days.

(iii) Effective soil co~erinq pressure, consolidation yield stress and pre-consolidation stress profiles of the oriqinal qround and pilinq structure As the consolidation yield stress of the original ground is larger than the effective soil covering stress, as shown in FIG. 19, the piling structure remains uncosolidated because its soil covering stress is lower than its effective soil covering stress, although the original ground is an over-consolidated clay layer.
Thus, the consolidation yield stress (pre-consolidation stress) of the ground to be reconstructed is distributed in a pre-consolidation region lying above the profile line of the effective soil covering stress due to the piling loads, so that the ground can be stable with respect to both the loads produced by these piling structures and both the vibration loads produced by railway trains.
(iv) Estimation of the qround reconstructed or improved Concisely shown in FIGS. 19, 20 and 21 are the results the stability of the piled ground for railway tracks, which was obtained by the application of the inventive method to clay of river origin. From these figures, it is found that the effect on ground improvement is achieved as initially planned.
Never until now is any subsidence observed. The ground has been stable with respect to earthquakes having a seismic intensity of 3 to 5.
In terms of undrained shearing strength, the grounds before and after reconstruction are compared with each other.
The undrained shearing strength is Cu = 1.2 to 2.2 for the original ground, Cu = 2.1 to 2.6 for the piled ground, and Cu = 2.7 to 5.0 for the ground reconstructed according to the inventive method.
On the other hand, the compressibility of the original ground and piling structure are Pc < 10 tf/m2 while the -21- ~2190~1~

consolidation yield stress of the reconstructed ground is Pc' > 10 to 18 tf/m2, indicating that apparent improvements in both strength and compressibility are obtained.

Claims (5)

1. A method of preventing changes in the nature of a ground wherein, with a consolidation yield stress profile lying within a pre-consolidation region on or above a profile line of an effective soil covering stress of a ground with a piling structure laid thereon, said effective soil covering stress of said ground with a piling structure laid thereon being calculated with respect to a foundation ground on which a piling structure is scheduled to be laid, by plotting an effective soil covering stress profile of an original ground and using said profile line as reference, on condition that a load of said piling structure is transmitted as such through said original ground, soil forming a ground to be reconstructed is improved without disturbing said ground to be reconstructed, and said ground to be reconstructed is in situ subjected to a single concurrent operation involving four principles for reconstruction of a soft ground, (1) consolidation and dehydration, (2) drainage, (3) solidification, and (4) replacement (called an instantaneous consolidation method), so that the ground can be improved within 24 hours, thereby preventing subsidence of said ground due to consolidation, and deformation and displacement of surrounding ground layers or structures built up thereon.
2. A method of preventing subsidence and destruction of ground due to external forces such as traffic loads, and seismic loads, by making use of the instantaneous consolidation method recited in Claim 1 with a consolidation yield stress profile lying within a pre-consolidation region on or above a profile line of an effective soil covering stress of a ground with a piling structure laid thereon, an effective soil covering stress profile of said ground with a piling structure laid thereof being calculated by plotting with respect to an existing road with a piling structure laid thereon an effective soil covering stress profile of a piled ground, and using said profile line as reference to determine a piling height from a stability strength with said traffic, and seismic loads on condition that loads as calculated as said piling height are transmitted as such in an original ground.
3. The method of preventing changes in the nature of a viscous ground, and of preventing earthquake disasters, wherein a strength property of the ground to be improved with respect to piling loads, traffic loads, and seismic loads as represented by an undrained shearing strength Cu', is Cu' > 2.0 to 3.0 tf/m2 in a normal state, and Cu' > 3.0 to 4.0 tf/m2 in a seismic state.
4. The method of preventing changes in the nature of a viscous ground, and of preventing earthquake disasters, wherein to distribute in said pre-consolidation region a compressibility property of the ground to be reconstructed with respect to piling loads, traffic load, and seismic loads as represented by a consolidation yield stress Pc, the instantaneous consolidation method is used so that in the case of a general piling structure, a consolidation yield stress (pre-consolidation stress) of the ground upon reconstructed is Pc' > 5 to 10 tf/m2 for clay of marine origin, and clay of river origin, and Pc' > 4 to 7 tf/m2 for peat, and humus soil, and in the case of a ground as calculated as said traffic loads, and said seismic loads, the consolidation yield stress is Pc' > 11 to 20 tf/m2 for clay of marine origin and clay of river origin, and Pc' > 7.5 to 10 tf/m2 for peat, and humus soil.
5. A method of improving a ground using the instantaneous consolidation method according to any one of Claims 1 to 4, wherein:
the strength of the ground upon reconstructed is preset to calculate the pre-consolidation stress Pc' from Cu'= Cu + m(Pc'-Pc) ~~~ (1) the pre-consolidation stress Pc' is preset to calculate the strength of the ground upon reconstructed from Pc'=(Cu'-Cu + m x Pc)/m ~~~ (2) where:
Cu is an undrained shearing strength in tf/m~ of the original ground which stands for a strength property thereof, Cu' is an undrained shearing strength in tf/m~ of the ground upon improved which stands for a strength property thereof, Pc is a consolidation yield stress in tf/m~ of the original ground which stands for a compressibility property thereof, Pc' is a consolidation yield (or pre-consolidation) stress in tf/m~ of the ground upon improved which stands for a compressibility property thereof, and m is a percentage of strength increase, provided that m = 0.39 to 0.42 for peat or humus soil, m = 0.21 to 0.38 for clay of marine origin, and m = 0.18 to 0.21 for clay of river origin.
CA002190212A 1995-11-13 1996-11-13 Method of preventing charges in the nature of viscous ground found in the foundation created for roads, banks or the like, and of preventing earthquake disaster Abandoned CA2190212A1 (en)

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JP7-329388 1995-11-13
JP32938895 1995-11-13
JP7-322396 1995-11-16
JP7322396A JPH09143973A (en) 1995-11-16 1995-11-16 Method for preventing disturbance of viscous-soil ground caused on road, levee prepared land, or the like and earthquake disaster

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JP4098777B2 (en) 2002-11-13 2008-06-11 ベネフィル・ワールドワイド・オサケユキテュア How to reduce the possibility of liquefaction of the basic soil
ITRE20070014A1 (en) * 2007-02-09 2008-08-10 Geosec Srl METHOD OF LOCAL SEISMIC PROTECTION OF MANUFACTURING AREAS AND / OR MANUFACTURED TO THE FOUNDATIONS AND THE SURROUNDING BUILDINGS.
CN103321205B (en) * 2013-06-20 2015-06-24 南京盼源工程技术有限公司 Disturbance compaction method for natural sedimentary soft clay foundations
CN113047268B (en) * 2021-03-11 2022-10-04 福建宝丰管桩有限公司 Concrete pipe pile with high stability coefficient and anti-settling function

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JPS53145314A (en) 1977-05-23 1978-12-18 Yuuichirou Takahashi Method and device for improving weak viscous ground
JPS57155419A (en) 1981-03-19 1982-09-25 Yuichiro Takahashi Composition for reinforcing organic soft ground and method of ground reinforcing construction utilizing said composition
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