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3200
Sub-Structure
Section 3200
3201 SCOPE
The specifications shall apply to soil nailing works as required to be carried out under the
Contract or as directed by the Engineer.
3202.1 Generally used soil nail installation techniques in practice are: (i) drilled and
grouted soil nails, and (ii) driven soil nails. Grouted nails are recommended for all types of
soil nail walls applications; and in particular, for walls with vertical height more than 7 m.
Driven nails shall only be used when wall heights are smaller (less than or upto 7.0 m). The
major difference between the two is the pullout resistance of the soil nails and grouted soil
nails are expected to have higher pull out resistance. Pull out test is desirable to check the
values of pullout resistance which is useful in soil nail design.
3202.2 Drilled and grouted soil nails (or simply grouted nails), are approximately 75
mm to 200 mm diameter nail holes drilled in the soil mass to be retained, which shall be
followed by placing of steel reinforcement bars (tendon) and the grouting of the drill hole.
3202.3 Driven soil nails are relatively small in diameter (20 mm to 25 mm) and are
mechanically driven into the ground. They are usually spaced approximately 0.5 m to 1.0
m apart.
Following covers the general materials required for the construction of typical soil nailing
structure.
The reinforcing element (tendon) shall be high strength steel reinforcing bar conforming to
IS: 1786 with a characteristic tensile strength of 415 MPa or higher which may be threaded
at one end. Minimum recommended diameter of reinforcement bar (tendon) is 16 mm.
The nail head shall comprise of following main components: the bearing-plate, hex nut,
and washers; and the headed-stud. The bearing plate with a central hole (with diameter
greater than reinforcement bar) shall be of minimum Fe250 grade steel, typically square in
shape with 200 to 250 mm side dimension and 19 mm thickness. Washers and nuts shall
be made of steel with a grade consistent with that of the nail bar commonly of 415 MPa or
higher. Nuts may be tightened with a hand-wrench. The headed-stud connection may
consist of four headed studs welded near the four corners of the bearing plate to provide
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Section 2200
anchorage of the nail head into the permanent facing. For temporary walls, the bearing
plate shall be on the outside face of the shotcrete facing.
3203.3 Grout
Grout for soil nails is required to fill the annular space between the nail bar and the
surrounding ground, and for shotcreting of the temporary facing. Grout for soil nail walls is
commonly a neat cement grout with the water/cement ratio typically ranging from 0.4 to
0.5. Grout mix shall be prepared in accordance with IS: 9012. Grout shall have a minimum
28 days characteristic strength of 20 MPa. For filling up nail holes, grout shall be pumped
shortly after the nail bar is placed in the drillhole to reduce the potential for hole squeezing
or caving. In solid nail bar applications, the grout may be injected by tremie methods through
a grout pipe, which is previously inserted to the bottom of the drillhole, until the grout
completely fills the drillhole.
3203.4 Centralizers
Centralizers are devices made of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) or other synthetic materials that
are installed at various locations along the length of each nail bar to ensure that a minimum
thickness of grout completely covers the nail bar. Centralizers shall be installed at regular
intervals, typically not exceeding 2.5 m, along the length of the nail and at a distance of
about 0.5 m from each end of the nail.
Soil nail walls are generally provided with two types of facings: (a) temporary facing and
(b) permanent facing.
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Section 3200
plate) welded on the bearing plates installed during construction temporary facing. Minimum
thickness of permanent facing shall not be less than 200 mm.
Step 1: Excavation of initial cut of 1.0 m -2.0 m depending upon the capacity of in-situ soil
to stand unsupported for about 12-24 hrs;
For soil nail walls more than 30 m long, exploratory borings should be spaced between 30
to 60 m along the proposed centerline of the wall. For walls less than 30 m long, at least
one boring is necessary along the proposed centerline of the wall. Borings are also necessary
in front and behind the proposed wall. Borings behind the wall should be located within a
distance up to 1 to 1.5 times the height of the wall behind the wall and should be spaced up
to 45 m along the wall alignment. Borings in front of the wall should be located within a
distance up to 0.75 times the wall height in front of the wall and should be spaced up to 60
m along the wall alignment. The depth of borings should extend at least one full wall height
below the bottom of the excavation.
The bond strength is the mobilized shear resistance along the soil-grout interface. The
bond strength adopted for the design of soil nails is commonly based on conservative
estimates obtained from field correlation studies and local experience in similar conditions.
Consequently, some percentage of the soil nails shall be load tested according to standard
procedure (pullout tests) in the field to verify bond strength design.
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Section 2200
Following are the in-situ conditions considered favorable for the prospective use of soil
nailing technique.
3207.1 Analysis of various failure modes of soil nail structures shall be performed
using allowable stress design methodology in accordance with IRC publication “Interim
Guidelines for Soil Nailing Technique in Highway Engineering Applications” or any other
state-of-art standard for analysis, design and construction of soil nail walls. For rigorous
analyses, use of computational tools based on advanced numerical techniques such as
finite element method, is strongly recommended.
Establish the layout of the soil nail wall, including: (1) wall height; (2) length of the wall; (3)
backslope; and (4) wall face batter. Wall face batter typically ranges from 0º to 10º. The
evaluation of the wall layout also includes developing longitudinal profile of the wall, locating
wall appurtenances (e.g., traffic barriers, utilities, and drainage systems), and establishing
ROW limitations.
Typically, same nail spacing can be adopted in both horizontal Sh and vertical S-v directions.
Nail spacing ranges from 1.25 to 2 m (commonly 1.5 m) for conventional drilled and grouted
soil nails, and as low as 0.4 m for driven nails. As a general rule, soil nail spacing in
horizontal and vertical direction must be such that each nail has an influence area
Sh × S v ≤ 4 m 2 .
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Section 3200
The soil nail pattern on wall face may be adopted as one of the following: (1) square (or
rectangular); (2) staggered in a triangular pattern; and (3) irregular (at limited locations)
depending upon the ease of construction and site-specific constraints.
Soil nails are typically installed at an inclination ranging from 0 to 30 degrees from horizontal
with a typical inclination of 10-25 degrees.
The distribution of soil nail lengths in a soil nail wall can be selected as either uniform (i.e.,
only one nail length is used for the entire wall), or variable, where different nail lengths may
be used for individual soil nail levels within a wall cross section. Uniform nail pattern is
recommended for most applications.
Soil nail walls used on typical highway projects are typically subjected to the following
different loads during their service life: (i) Dead loads DL (e.g., weight of the soil nail wall
system, lateral earth pressure, weight of a nearby above-ground structure); (ii) Live loads
LL (e.g., traffic loads); (iii) impact loads IL (e.g., vehicle collision on barriers above soil nail
wall); and (iv) earthquake loads EQ. Following load combinations are recommended to
assess the most critical loading condition:
a) DL + LL
b)
c)
For earthquake loads, allowable stresses shall be increased by 133 percent from the
values obtained with factors of safety for static loads.
The maximum permissible lateral deformation at the top of the soil nail walls constructed
in weathered rock and stiff soils is 0.1%H; sandy soils is 0.2%H and for fine-grained soils
is 0.3%H. Under no circumstances maximum permissible lateral deformation shall exceed
0.3% H, where: H is the vertical height of the soil nail wall. Permissible vertical deformation
(i.e., settlement) shall be considered to be same as the permissible horizontal deformation.
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Section 2200
Surface water and groundwater must be controlled both during and after construction of
the soil nail wall. A surface water interceptor ditch, excavated along the crest of the excavation
and lined with concrete, is a recommended element for controlling surface water flows.
Additionally, if ground water impacts are temporary or localized, suitable dewatering
measures may be taken for lowering the groundwater table
Long term drainage shall be provided by means of the drainage system comprising of: (i)
vertical geo-composite drain strips placed suitably along the face of wall; (ii) weep holes
in the form of perforated PVC pipes of typical diameter as 50-100 mm and 300- 600 mm
length, placed through the face at the location of expected localised seepage; (iii) provision
of horizontal or slightly inclined drain pipes of typical diameter 50 mm installed at the
locations where it is necessary to control the groundwater pressures imposed on the retained
soil mass; (iv) installation of permanent interception ditch behind the wall at its crest to
prevent surface water runoff from infiltrating behind the wall or flowing over the wall edge;
and (v) provision of a vegetative protective cap/cover to reduce or prevent water infiltration
into the soil.
Corrosion potential of the soil must be evaluated for all permanent soil nail walls and, in
some cases, for temporary walls.
3210.1 Field pullout testing of soil nails shall be conducted (a) to verify that the nail
design loads can be carried without excessive movements and with an adequate safety
factor for the service life of the structure, and (b) to verify the adequacy of the contractor’s
drilling, installation, and grouting operations prior to and during construction of production
soil nails.
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Section 3200
Depending upon the type of test being performed, the maximum test load, the load
increments, and the time that each load increment is held shall be determined. To prevent
chances of explosive failure of the steel, in no case, the soil nail tendon be stressed to
more than 80 percent of its minimum ultimate tensile strength for grade Fe415 steel, or
more than 90 percent of the minimum yield strength for grade Fe500 steel.
A verification test on soil nail is performed: (a) to determine the ultimate bond capacity (if
carried to pullout failure); (b) verify the design bond factor of safety, and (c) to determine
the soil nail load at which excessive creep occurs. Verification tests are generally conducted
on non-production “sacrificial” nails as a first order of work prior to construction.
A proof test is typically performed on a specified number of the total number of production
soil nails installed. Typically, successful proof tests shall be performed on 5 percent of the
production nails in each row or a minimum of 1 test per row. Proof tests provide information
necessary to evaluate the ability of production soil nails to safely withstand design loads
without excessive structural movement or long-term creep over the structure’s service life.
Creep tests are generally performed as part of a verification or proof test to ensure that
nail design loads can be safely carried throughout the structure service life.
Measurements for earthwork shall conform to IS: 1200(Part I), concrete work shall conform
to IS: 1200(Part II) and steelworks shall conform to IS: 1200(Part VIII). Measurement of
facia shall be in sq. metres.
3212 RATES
Rates for labour, machinery and various structural components shall conform to the local
schedule of rates in practice.
3213 REFERENCES
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Section 2200
IS:1566-1982. Specification for hard-drawn steel wire fabric for concrete reinforcement
(second revision incorporating amendments nos. 1, 2 and 3).
IS:1786-1985. Specification for high strength deformed steel bars and wires for concrete
reinforcement (third revision).
IRC publication “Interim Guidelines for Soil Nailing Technique in Highway Engineering
Applications” (to be published).