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  2. Lateral earth pressure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_earth_pressure

    An example of lateral earth pressure overturning a retaining wall. The lateral earth pressure is the pressure that soil exerts in the horizontal direction. It is important because it affects the consolidation behavior and strength of the soil and because it is considered in the design of geotechnical engineering structures such as retaining walls, basements, tunnels, deep foundations and ...

  3. Mechanically stabilized earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanically_stabilized_earth

    A diagram of a mechanically stabilized earth wall as it would be modeled in a finite element analysis. Mechanically stabilized earth (MSE or reinforced soil) is soil constructed with artificial reinforcing. It can be used for retaining walls, bridge abutments, seawalls, and dikes.

  4. Soil mechanics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_mechanics

    Lateral earth stress theory is used to estimate the amount of stress soil can exert perpendicular to gravity. This is the stress exerted on retaining walls. A lateral earth stress coefficient, K, is defined as the ratio of lateral (horizontal) effective stress to vertical effective stress for cohesionless soils (K=σ' h /σ' v). There are three ...

  5. Retaining wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retaining_wall

    A retaining wall is designed to hold in place a mass of earth or the like, such as the edge of a terrace or excavation. The structure is constructed to resist the lateral pressure of soil when there is a desired change in ground elevation that exceeds the angle of repose of the soil.

  6. File:Earth Pressure In Action.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Earth_Pressure_In...

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  7. Rankine theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rankine_theory

    Rankine's theory (maximum-normal stress theory), developed in 1857 by William John Macquorn Rankine, [1] is a stress field solution that predicts active and passive earth pressure. It assumes that the soil is cohesionless, the wall is frictionless, the soil-wall interface is vertical, the failure surface on which the soil moves is planar , and ...

  8. Pressuremeter test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressuremeter_Test

    A pressuremeter is a meter constructed to measure the “at-rest horizontal earth pressure”. The pressuremeter has two major components. [1] The first component is a read-out unit that remains above ground. The second component of the pressure meter is a probe that is inserted into the borehole (ground) to read the pressure.

  9. Abutment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abutment

    Gravity abutment, resists horizontal earth pressure with its own dead weight; U abutment, U-shaped gravity abutment; Cantilever abutment, cantilever retaining wall designed for large vertical loads; Full height abutment, cantilever abutment that extends from the underpass grade line to the grade line of the overpass roadway