3.1. Load Displacement Relationship
According to the test results, the load–displacement curves (Q-s curve) of the pile-end soilless compressive pile and the conventional compressive pile are plotted as shown in
Figure 4.
From
Figure 4a, it can be seen that the Q-s curve of the pile-end soilless compressive pile shows a slow–steep type. When the load is less than 13.35 kN, the pile-top settlement is small, and the settlement varies approximately linearly with the increase of the load. As the load increases, the Q-s curve gradually bends, and the settlement rate increases, showing a nonlinear change. When the load is greater than 40.05 kN, the settlement rate of the pile top increases rapidly, and the Q-s curve shows a steep drop point at 45.39 kN. The cumulative settlement of the pile top is 4.31 mm.
Figure 4b show the Q-s curve of the conventional compressive pile, which is consistent with the trend of the curve of the pile-end soilless compressive pile, and the curve shows a slow–steep type. When the load is less than 21.32 kN, the pile top settlement is small. As the load increases, the Q-s curve gradually bends, and the settlement rate of the pile top increases, showing a nonlinear change. When the load is greater than 53.3 kN, the settlement rate of the pile top increases rapidly, and the Q-s curve shows a steep drop point at 58.63 kN. The cumulative settlement of the pile top is 4.34 mm.
The overall performance of the Q-s curves of the two test piles is relatively consistent, and the Q-s curves can be divided into three stages: the linear stage, the local shear stage, and the failure stage. For the pile-end soilless compressive pile, when the load is in the range of 0–10.68 kN, the Q-s curve is approximately a straight line, showing that the pile body is in a linear stage. When the load is in the range of 13.35–40.05 kN, the Q-s curve changes nonlinearly, the pile top settlement increases significantly, and the soil around the pile gradually changes nonlinearly, showing that the pile body is in the local shear stage. When the load is in the range of 42.72–48.06 kN, the pile top settlement increases rapidly, and when the soil around the pile is damaged, the pile displacement will increase sharply, and the whole pile slides downward, at which time the pile is in the failure stage. Similarly, the conventional compressive pile is divided into three stages: When the load is 0–15.99 kN, it is the linear stage. When the load is 21.32–53.3 kN, it is the local shear stage. When the load is 58.63–63.96 kN, it is the failure stage. Different from the pile-end soilless compressive pile, when the conventional compressive pile is in the failure stage and the soil at the end of the pile is damaged by compression, the pile displacement will increase sharply, and the whole pile will slide downward.
Based on the measured data, the s-lgt curves of the two test piles under different static loads were obtained, as shown in
Figure 5.
From
Figure 5a, after the pile-end soilless compressive pile was loaded to 48.06 kN, the pile top settlement suddenly increased to 8.12 mm, and the soil around the pile was damaged. Combined with
Figure 4a, 45.39 kN was the ultimate bearing capacity of the pile-end soilless compressive pile. From
Figure 5b, after the conventional compressive pile was loaded to 63.96 kN, the pile top settlement suddenly increased to 10.13 mm, and the pile-end soil was damaged. Combined with
Figure 4b, 58.63 kN was the ultimate bearing capacity of the conventional compressive pile.
Compared with the ultimate bearing capacity, the linear section of the pile-end soilless compressive pile accounts for about 23.5% before the ultimate bearing capacity, and the linear section of the conventional compressive pile accounts for about 36.4% before the ultimate bearing capacity. This shows that the length of the linear section on the Q-s curve of the pile-end soilless compressive pile is smaller than that of the linear stage of the conventional compressive pile, and the conventional compressive pile has better ductility.
3.2. Analysis of Pile Axial Force
Through the strain gauges set on the pile body, the strain at each section of the pile body under different loads can be obtained, and the axial force of the pile at each section can be calculated. The calculation formula is:
Here, Ap represents the cross-sectional area of the pile. Ep represents the elastic modulus of the pile. εi is the strain at the pile section i. Pi represents the value of the axial force at the pile section i.
The variation curves of the pile axial force magnitude along the depth for the pile-end soilless compressive pile and the conventional compressive pile are shown in
Figure 6.
Under the vertical load, the axial elastic compression of the pile causes the relative displacement of the pile and soil, thereby generating the skin friction, while the vertical load overcomes the skin friction and transmits down the pile body. As shown in
Figure 5, the axial force curve of the pile body is roughly linearly distributed. The steepness of different segments reflects the size of the skin friction of the segment; the steeper the curve, the smaller the skin friction, and vice versa, the greater the skin friction. At the initial stage of loading, the slope change of the axial force curve on the upper part of both test piles is relatively obvious, which indicates that the skin friction at the pile body is fully exerted. At the same depth, as the load increases, the slope of the axial force distribution curve gradually decreases until it is stable. This shows that the skin friction develops gradually with the increase of the load and finally tends to be stable. This is mainly because when the load is gradually increased, the compression and displacement of the pile body increase and the skin friction increases with the increase of the relative displacement until it reaches stability.
Under different loads, the axial force of the two test piles gradually decreases downward with the depth, reflecting the characteristics of the skin friction gradually exerting from top to bottom along the pile body, and the axial force distribution forms are basically similar but also different: For the axial force distribution of the pile-end soilless compressive pile (
Figure 6a), the axial force at the pile-end soilless compressive pile is zero during loading, which directly reflects the successful fabrication of the pile-end soilless compressive pile. The loads are balanced by the skin friction provided by the pile-side soil, and the curves are uniformly distributed as the load increases. For the axial force distribution of conventional compressive pile (
Figure 6b), the load is mostly borne by the skin friction during the initial loading period. With the increase of the load, the resistance of the pile-end is gradually exerted. Under the ultimate load, the slope of the axial force curve of the pile body becomes smaller, and the axial force at the end of the pile is about 42% of the pile top load, exhibiting the characteristics of an end-bearing friction pile.
3.3. Analysis of the Skin Friction
According to the difference between the axial force of the pile body between the two measuring points divided by the pile side surface area of the section, the skin friction f
i of the section can be obtained. The calculation formula is:
where P
i−1, P
i represents the axial force values of two adjacent measurement points above and below the pile section i. U represents the pile circumference. l
i represents the length of the pile section i.
From the calculation results, the skin friction distribution curves of the two test piles are obtained. The linear stage is a solid line, the local shear stage is a dashed line, and the failure stage is a dotted line, as shown in
Figure 7.
In
Figure 7, it can be seen that skin friction is gradually exerted with the increase of the load. Affected by the load, the pile body is compressed and deformed, resulting in the relative displacement of the pile and the soil around the pile, thus generating skin friction to bear the upper load. Overall, skin friction tends to increase first and then decrease and increase as the load increases, and the curve is characterized by “small on both sides and large in the middle”. Both piles decrease skin friction along the pile body after peaking with increasing load, and the rate of decrease is greater for conventional piles than for pile-end soilless compressive pile. At the ultimate load, the maximum skin friction of the pile-end soilless compressive pile is 43.46 kPa, and the maximum skin friction of the conventional compressive pile is 42.06 kPa. The soil layers corresponding to the peaks of the skin friction of the two piles are silty clay–muddy silty clay layers. The maximum skin friction of the two piles is similar in value, indicating that the skin friction performance of the two test piles in this soil layer is almost the same. At the pile-end position, the skin friction of the two piles are 35.45 kPa and 25.55 kPa, respectively. The skin friction of the conventional compressive pile is about 28% lower than that of the pile-end soilless compressive pile.
3.4. Evolution of the Skin Friction
The skin friction distribution curve is normalized, and the abscissa is defined as the segment skin friction divided by the maximum skin friction of the test pile at this level of load, which becomes the pile segment skin friction ratio, and the ordinate is defined as the position of the strain gauge divided by the pile length to become the depth ratio. The normalized curve is shown in
Figure 8. The pile-end soilless compressive pile are solid lines, and the conventional compressive pile are dashed lines. In order to describe the variation law of the skin friction ratio of the pile segment conveniently, define 0–0.25 L as the upper part of the pile, 0.25 L–0.5 L as the upper-middle part of the pile, 0.5 L–0.75 L as lower-middle part of the pile, and 0.75 L–L as the lower part of the pile; the length of the pile is L.
Figure 8 correspond to the distribution changes and comparisons of the pile segment skin friction ratio of the two piles in the linear stage, the local shear stage, and the failure stage.
In
Figure 8a, in the linear phase, the pile side frictional resistance of both piles increases and then decreases in the direction of the pile body, and the peak value occurs in the middle and upper part of the pile. In the upper area of the two piles, the pile segment skin friction ratio of the pile-end soilless compressive pile decreases from 0.6 to 0.51, while the pile segment skin friction ratio of the conventional compressive pile increases from 0.43 to 0.5. This indicates that the performance of load transfer on the upper part of the pile-end soilless compressive pile is better than that of the conventional compressive pile when the test piles are in the linear stage.
In
Figure 8b, In the local shear stage, with the increase of load, the distribution trend of skin friction of the two test piles continued to increase first and then decrease, and the location of peak skin friction did not change. In the upper part of the two piles, the lateral friction ratio of the pile section pile segment skin friction ratio of the two test piles increased continuously but more concentrated as the load increased, indicating that the two test piles behaved in a more consistent manner as the load increased and the skin friction provided by the soil around the upper part of the pile increased gradually reaching the limit. In the middle-lower sections of the pile, the pile segment skin friction ratio of the pile-end soilless compressive pile increases from 0.48 to 0.84, while the pile segment skin friction ratio of the conventional compressive pile increases from 0.49 to 0.68. In the lower part of the pile, the pile segment skin friction ratio of the pile-end soilless compressive pile increases from 0.3 to 0.67, while the pile segment skin friction ratio of the conventional compressive pile increases from 0.4 to 0.56. Compared with the conventional compressive pile, the pile segment skin friction ratio of the pile-end soilless compressive pile is more variable. It shows that as the load increases, the friction performance of the soil layer around the lower-middle part and lower part of two piles of the pile-end soilless compressive pile is better than that of the conventional compression pile. That is to say, the skin friction of the lower-middle part and lower part of the pile-end soilless compressive pile is exerted to an increasing degree.
A large number of experimental studies have shown that only when the vertical load reaches a certain value does the pile-end resistance gradually come into play, and then the pile-end resistance may have an effect on the skin friction. Therefore, the variation of skin friction under ultimate load is an effective means to study the effect of the presence of the pile-end soil on the pile skin friction. From
Figure 8c, when the load is in the failure stage, the skin friction of both piles increases to different degrees. From the upper part of the pile to the middle-lower part of the pile, the skin friction of the pile-end soilless compressive pile is smaller than that of the conventional compression pile. In the lower part of the pile, the pile segment skin friction ratio of the pile-end soilless compressive pile increases from 0.71 to 0.82, while the pile segment skin friction ratio of the conventional compressive pile increases from 0.59 to 0.61. This shows that as the load increases to the failure stage, the skin friction of each pile section and the pile segment skin friction ratio also increases, and the laws of the two piles are relatively consistent. However, from the values of the pile segment skin friction ratio, the conventional compression pile is much smaller than the pile-end soilless compressive pile, and the skin friction of the conventional compression pile shows an obvious weakening phenomenon. Combined with the skin friction values of the corresponding pile sections, the skin friction is 30.59 kPa for the conventional compressive pile and 37.27 kPa for the pile-end soilless compressive pile in the middle-lower part of the pile. The skin friction of the conventional compressive pile is about 18% lower than that of the pile-end soilless compressive pile. In the lower part of the pile, the skin friction of the conventional compression pile is 25.55 kPa, and the pile-end soilless compressive pile is 35.45 kPa. The skin friction of the conventional compressive pile is about 28% lower than that of the pile-end soilless compressive pile. This weakening effect exists in the middle and lower parts of the pile, and the weakening effect decreases from bottom to top.
In general, the skin friction of both piles is basically the same when subjected to vertical load, with the law of top-down gradual action. That is, the skin friction on the upper part of the pile bears the load first, and as the load continues to increase, the skin friction on the lower part of the pile comes into play. The distribution form and distribution pattern of the pile segment skin friction ratio is more consistent between the two piles, while the difference in the magnitude of the pile segment skin friction ratio reflects the difference between the two piles. For the pile-end soilless compressive pile, from the linear stage to the local shear stage to the final failure stage, the skin friction of each pile section reaches the limit, and then the soil around the pile breaks down, and the pile top load reaches the maximum. For the conventional compressive pile, from the linear stage to the local shear stage to the final failure stage, skin friction comes into play continuously, and the end resistance also comes into play gradually as the load increases. Different from the pile-end soilless compressive pile, the skin friction of some pile sections is not kept consistent. This may be due to the presence of the pile-end soil, which provides an end resistance that limits the skin friction, which shows a weakening effect.