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Table 9-1: Friction Angle for Dissimilar Materials. Interface Materials Mass concrete against the following materials Clean sound rock 0.70 Clean gravel, gravel-sand mixtures, coarse sand to 31 0.55 to 0.60 Clean fine to medium sand,
silty medium to coarse sand, silty or clayey gravel to 29 0.45 to 0.55 Clean fine sand, silty or clayey fine to medium sand to 24 0.34 to 0.45
Fine sandy silt, nonplastic silt to 19 0.31 to 0.34 Very stiff and hard residual or preconsolidated clay to 26 0.40 to 0.49 Medium stiff and stiff clay and silty clay to 19 0.31 to 0.34 Steel piles against the following soils Clean gravel,
gravel sand mixtures, well-graded
rock fill with spalls22 0.40 Clean sand, silty sand-gravel mixture, single size hard rock fill 0.31
Silty Sand, gravel or sand mixed with silt or clay 0.25 Fine sandy silt, nonplastic silt 0.19 Formed or precast concrete against the following soils Clean gravel, gravel-sand mixture, well-graded rock fill with spalls
22 to 26 0.40 to 0.49 Clean sand, silty sand-gravel mixture, single-size hard rock fill to 22 0.31 to 0.40 Silty sand, gravel or sand mixed with silt or clay 0.31 Fine sandy silt, nonplastic silt
.25 The values cited above are intended for mass concrete, steel, or precast concrete placed against the various materials listed. Some ground movement beyond that which is required to develop active earth pressure maybe required to realize the full benefit of wall friction ground movement will be influenced by the construction techniques used to install the lagging or panels between the vertical support elements.
Long-term earth pressures from stiff clays and plastic silts acting on permanent structures will generally be controlled by the effective stress strength properties. For temporary wall applications in cohesive soils, the active pressure can be determined based on total stress methods and undrained shear
strength parameters however, the active pressure shall not be less than 0.25 times the effective overburden pressure at any depth, or 0.035 ksf/ft of wall height, whichever is greater (AASHTO 2014). For soft to medium-stiff clays, lateral loads are typically governed by the undrained (total stress) strength properties as outlined within AASHTO Section 3.11. Information regarding evaluation of effective and total stress strength properties of cohesive soils is included in GEC-5 (Loehr et al. 2016). If hydrostatic pressure behind the wall cannot be relieved using a drainage medium behind
the lagging or panel fascia, water pressure must be added to that of earth pressure (with submerged unit weights for earth pressure.
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