67 illustrated in Figure 6-3 (Reese 1986). If the foundation element being analyzed has reached the critical depth under the applied loads and has not satisfied the deflection criteria, then the diameter or width of
the element must be increased, or additional foundation elements can be provided to reduce the load demand, or a different type of element must be considered. b.
Site variability, both in terms of the profile used and the design parameters, should be considered in assessing the geotechnical strength. For
relatively variable conditions, adequate or reserve geotechnical resistance maybe desirable when assessing the Geotechnical Strength Limit State. c. Note that in assessing the Geotechnical Strength Limit State, failure is not necessarily geotechnical
failure of the soil, rather it is defined by a deflection limit for consistency and applicability of the p-y approach. The analysis must converge at a reasonable deflection limit to represent a stable condition.
5. The factored loads may exceed the strength of the trial foundation element. This is not an issue though as the intent of this Geotechnical Strength Limit State analysis is to verify that the embedment is adequate for the pile to behave as a ductile element rather than to fail through rotation
(geotechnical failure of the soil. It is for this reason that the Geotechnical Strength Limit State is modeled with the foundation element as a linearly elastic beam. The Structural Strength Limit State is addressed as a separate section.
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