CAUSES OF FOUNDATION SETTLEMENT


Settlement of foundation can be defined as its permanent downward displacement. There are two basic causes of foundation settlement:



Settlement Due Directly to the Weight of the Structure

The first type of settlement is directly caused by the weight of the structure. For example, the weight of a building may cause compression of an underlying sand deposit or consolidation of an underlying clay layer. Often the settlement analysis is based on the actual dead load of the structure. The dead load is defined as the structural weight due to beams, columns, floors, roofs, and other fixed members. The dead load does not include nonstructural items. Live loads are defined as the weight of nonstructural members, such as furniture, occupants, inventory, and snow. Live loads can also result in settlement of the structure.

For example, if the proposed structure is a library, then the actual weight of the books (a live load) should be included in the settlement analyses. Likewise, for a proposed warehouse, it may be appropriate to include the actual weight of anticipated stored items in the settlement analyses. In other projects where the live loads represent a significant part of the loading, such as large electrical transmission towers that will be subjected to wind loads, the live load (wind) may also be included in the settlement analysis. Considerable experience and judgment are required to determine the load that is to be used in the settlement analyses.

Settlement Due to Secondary Influences

The second basic type of settlement of a building is caused by secondary influence, which may develop at a time long after the completion of the structure. This type of settlement is not directly caused by the weight of the structure. For example, the foundation may settle as water infiltrates the ground and causes unstable soils to collapse (i.e., collapsible soil). The foundation may also settle due to yielding of adjacent excavations or the collapse of limestone cavities or under-ground mines and tunnels. Other causes of settlement that would be included in this category are natural disasters, such as settlement caused by earthquakes or undermining of the foundation from floods.

Subsidence is usually defined as a sinking down of a large area of the ground surface. Subsidence could be caused by the extraction of oil or groundwater that leads to a compression of the underlying porous soil or rock structure. Since subsidence is due to a secondary influence (extraction of oil or groundwater), its effect on the structure would be included in the second basic type of settlement.

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