Module Title: | Geotechnical Engineering II |
Language of Instruction: | English |
Teaching & Learning Strategies: |
Lectures
Demonstrations
Project work
Practicals
Presentation
Private study
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Module Aim: |
(a) To understand the physical and mechanical properties of soils;
(b) To develop a general appreciation of environmental issues and their vulnerability to engineering development projects; (c) To develop a general appreciation of sustainable construction principles as it relates to Civil & Geotechnical Engineering;
(d) To be able to determine parameters from soil testing to characterize soil properties,
(d) soil strength and soil deformations,
(e) to be able to apply the principles of soil mechanics to analyze and design simple geotechnical systems;
(f) To increase the understanding of the effects of construction on groundwater and the effects of groundwater on construction;
(g) To develop the skills required to evaluate factual Geotechnical Engineering reports;
(h) To develop the skills required to assist in writing an interpretative Geotechnical engineering reports;
(i) To recognise when simple geotechnical analysis and design are insufficient to safely or cost effectively evaluate/design a project;
(j) To equip the student to operate as a Civil Engineer with a good understanding of Geotechnical Engineering;
(k) To equip the student with the skills and information necessary to undertake post-graduated study
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Learning Outcomes |
On successful completion of this module the learner should be able to: |
LO1 |
Assess the information contained in factual geotechnical reports including laboratory test results |
LO2 |
Prepare well presented interpretative geotechnical calculations and carry out simple geotechnical design and analysis |
LO3 |
Assess ground conditions to evaluate SI requirements for field work, sampling and testing |
LO4 |
Understand the value of desk study information and its role in preparation of factual and interpretative reports |
Pre-requisite learning |
Module Recommendations
This is prior learning (or a practical skill) that is recommended before enrolment in this module.
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6566 |
ENGR H3503 |
Geotechnical Engineering I |
6801 |
ENGR H3504 |
Earthworks Analysis |
Incompatible Modules
These are modules which have learning outcomes that are too similar to the learning outcomes of this module. |
No incompatible modules listed |
Co-requisite Modules
|
No Co-requisite modules listed |
Requirements
This is prior learning (or a practical skill) that is mandatory before enrolment in this module is allowed. |
Engineering Geology |
Module Content & Assessment
Indicative Content |
Site Investigation
(a) Contents of GI report, (b) Determination of appropriate site investigation techniques, (c) Sample selection,in-situ testing,(d) laboratory testing on a site specific basis,
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Groundwaterflow through soils
Flow through soils; (a) Permeability, (b) Head and head tests, (c) Flow nets, (d) Hydraulic gradient, (e) Uplift, seepage and piping forces (f) Filter design and geotextiles
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Stresses, Strains and Elastic Deformation of Soils
(a) Stress-strain, (b) Stresses from surface loads, (c) Settlements,
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One-dimensional consolidation settlement of fine-grained soils
Primary and secondary consolidation, (a) Drainage path, (b) Rate of consolidation, (c) Over-consolidation ratio (d) Field vs. laboratory consolidation (e) Surcharging (f) Use of vertical drains, (f) Derivation, use and understanding of Continuity and Effective Stress equations
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Shear strength of Soils
(a) Undrained and drained shear strength, (b) Laboratory determination of shear strength using shear box, Triaxial (drained and undrained), (b) In-situ determination, (c) Introduction to Piezocone and pressure meter
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Bearing capacity of soils and settlement of shallow foundations
(a) Collapse and failure loads - Ultimate and service loads, (b) Settlement, (c) In-situ testing (d) Design to EC 7, (e) Comparison of European vs other International Design Principles
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Pile Foundations
(a) Piling - types, (b) Effects of installation, (c) Design parameters and pile design, (d) Pile settlement analysis, ULS vs SLS - Load capacity, (e) Testing and Specification; (f) Allowable settlement; (g) Negative skin friction, (H) Single piles vs. pile groups, (i) EC 7 vs other International Codes
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Stability of earth retaining structures
(a) Types, (b) Lateral earth pressure theory (b) Analyses and design, (c) Introduction to computer based analysis
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Slope stability
(a) Types of slopes, (b) Types of failures, (c) Methods of analysis; (d) Computer analysis, (e) Probabilistic vs deterministic analysis (f) Slope remediation and stability
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Soil stabilization
(a) Lime,cement, pfa, stabilization on mineral soils and peat - chemical reactions within soil mass
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Assessment Breakdown | % |
Continuous Assessment | 10.00% |
Project | 20.00% |
Practical | 10.00% |
End of Module Formal Examination | 60.00% |
Continuous Assessment |
Assessment Type |
Assessment Description |
Outcome addressed |
% of total |
Assessment Date |
Examination |
Term 1 Exam |
1,3 |
10.00 |
n/a |
Project |
Assessment Type |
Assessment Description |
Outcome addressed |
% of total |
Assessment Date |
Project |
Project |
1,2,3,4 |
20.00 |
Sem 1 End |
Practical |
Assessment Type |
Assessment Description |
Outcome addressed |
% of total |
Assessment Date |
Practical/Skills Evaluation |
Practical |
1,2,3,4 |
10.00 |
Sem 1 End |
End of Module Formal Examination |
Assessment Type |
Assessment Description |
Outcome addressed |
% of total |
Assessment Date |
Formal Exam |
Exam |
1,2,3,4 |
60.00 |
End-of-Semester |
SETU Carlow Campus reserves the right to alter the nature and timings of assessment
Module Workload
Workload: Full Time |
Workload Type |
Frequency |
Average Weekly Learner Workload |
Lecture |
30 Weeks per Stage |
3.00 |
Estimated Learner Hours |
30 Weeks per Stage |
3.00 |
Total Hours |
180.00 |
Module Delivered In
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