[0001] The invention relates to a method of making sheet piling and to an asymmetric-Z-section
sheet pile for use in the method.
[0002] It is well known to make sheet piling from sheet piles of Z-shaped pile section,
i.e. a pile made from steel through hot rolling or cold shaping, having a cross-sectional
shape which is composed of two parallel end flanges joined by an inclined intermediate
portion, the two flanges having a hook at their free end.
[0003] For a long time now, planking, landing stages, wharves and similar bank provisions
along waterways have been composed of separate driven hot-rolled steel sheet piles,
which are joined to each other by means of interlocking hooks extending along their
edges (forming the so-called lock).
[0004] For a retaining wall to be formed, such piles are driven or vibrated into the ground
successively or in groups, with adjoining sheet piles interlocking through the hooks
extending throughout the length of the free edges. The sectional profile of the finished
retaining wall is determined by the profile of the piles that are used and by the
relative position of the successive piles, which depends on whether the piles are
all driven in in the same position or whether each successive pile is rotated through
180° about its longitudinal axis relative to the preceding pile. In general, a retaining
wall has a crenellated cross-section, the C-shaped hollow sides being referred to
as channels.
[0005] Further, when the height of retaining walls that have thus been built up exceeds
a certain value, they must be secured to the mass of earth bearing on them at the
back by means of anchors. An anchor is a rod with a widened end, extending through
a sheet pile into the ground behind the pile. The rod is connected at the front of
the pile by means of an anchor seat, which is welded to the pile. There exist so-called
grout anchors, in which the anchor rod is guided through a tube and its free end is
arranged in a ball of mortar (grout).
[0006] By employing pile cross-sections of great height (deep channel) high moments of resistance
and inertia are also obtained in the case of small wall thicknesses. The comparatively
small amount of material required leads to more economic planking designs, wherein
often cold-shaped sheet piles are used.
[0007] With respect to the choice of the shape of the sheet piles, the following can be
observed.
[0008] Z-shaped pile sections, i.e. piles of a sectional form which is composed of two parallel
end flanges which are joined by an inclining intermediate portion, are more eligible
than U-shaped or Ω-shaped pile sections as regards cost price.
[0009] U-section sheet piles have a trapezoidal section formed by an intermediate portion
with two slightly diverging flanges whose free ends terminate directly in the locking
hooks. In a retaining wall built up from such U-section piles, each successive pile
has been rotated through 180° about its longitudinal axis relative to the preceding
pile. In this arrangement, the locks in the retaining wall are in the "neutral line"
and the theoretic moment of resistance is thereby reduced.
[0010] Ω-shaped pile sections, i.e. piles with a sectional form consisting of an intermediate
portion, two diverging flanges with two end portions which extend parallel to the
intermediate portion and terminate in locking hooks, have so little stiffness of their
own in the case of small wall thickness, that they are hard to manipulate in the case
of greater widths. It is therefore customary to compose Ω-shaped pile sections from
Z-section piles by joining them in pairs and interconnecting them by spot welding,
while each successive pile is rotated through 180° about its longitudinal axis relative
to the preceding one. By starting thus from Z-sections, Ω-sheet piling of great widths
of 130 cm can be obtained without the disadvantage of poor rigidity inherent to Ω-section
piles.
[0011] An important disadvantage of Z-sections now used in this manner is that a lock extends
in the middle of each channel in a retaining wall, which lock forms an obstruction
when an anchor is being mounted. For the anchor seat to be in surface-to-surface contact
with the bottom of the channel, either the lock must be burnt away locally or the
bottom of the channel must be filled up locally on opposite sides of the inwardly
projecting lock by means of filler plates to adjust to the thickness of the lock.
[0012] The drawback of burning away the lock before a sheet pile is driven in, is that the
pile is weakened and will be deformed when it is being driven into heavier types of
soil. Burning away the lock after a pile has been driven in is nearly always made
more difficult by the presence of soil and/or ground water.
[0013] Mounting filler plates on opposite sides of the lock to form a flat support for the
base plate of the anchor seat has the drawback, in addition to the fact that more
material is required, that a great deal of additional high-quality welding must be
performed under difficult conditions in order to effect a connection that is capable
of transmitting great vertical shearing forces from the (grout) anchor and the anchor
seat to the sheet piles that constitute the planking.
[0014] The problems outlined hereinabove are avoided in that in the method for making sheet
piling, wherein Ω-section sheet piles made of pairs of Z-section piles previously
welded together are driven or vibrated into the ground successively or in groups and
wherein adjoining Ω-sheet piles interlock by means of the hooks extending throughout
the length of their free edges, according to the invention, for making the Ω-section
sheet piles, use is made of Z-section sheet piles with the inclined intermediate portion
thereof located off the centre of the pile.
[0015] In sheet piling realized in this manner, each channel contains enough space on the
side of the lock extending therethrough, for an anchor seat to be mounted directly
against the channel bottom. It only remains necessary that elliptical holes are burnt
in the sheet piles in question for passing therethrough the anchor rod and a grout
injection tube. This, too, may be done in a simpler manner than in sheet piling obtained
in the conventional manner wherein the Ω-section sheet piles are made from symmetrically
formed Z-piles because it is not necessary to burn through the lock extending in the
middle of the channel.
[0016] In the present application of asymmmetrical Z-section piles for making Ω-section
sheet piles, the aforementioned disadvantages of retaining walls built up from the
known symmetrical Z-section piles with regard to the anchorage of the wall, are avoided,
while maintaining the advantages thereof, namely, the comparatively low cost-price
and locks located off the neutral line in a retaining wall.
[0017] The invention also relates to sheet piles having an asymmetrical Z-section for use
in the method described above, which piles consist of a Z-shaped pile section, i.e.
a pile formed from steel by hot rolling of cold formation, having a sectional form
composed of two parallel end flanges connected by an inclined intermediate portion,
the end flanges at their free ends being provided with a hook, wherein, according
to the invention, the inclined intermediate portion is arranged off the centre of
the pile, so that in a Ω-section pile composed of two of such Z-section piles, wherein
one pile has been rotated through 180° about its longitudinal axis relative to the
other pile, for the purpose of positioning an anchor plate, the lock connecting the
two Z-section piles, is displaced laterally relative to the axis of the channel bottom.
[0018] It is observed that in DE-C-611277 (Kurt Willner) an asymmetrical Z-section sheet
pile is proposed, but with an entirely different aim than in the present invention,
namely, to reduce deviation of the free lock edge during the driving operation. The
method according to the invention and the specific use of asymmetric Z-section sheet
piling to enable better anchorage of the wall, cannot be derived from that publication.
In the method described in that publication, for forming sheet piling, the Z-section
piles are driven in one by one without prior joining to form Ω-sections.
[0019] In further explanation of the invention, with reference to the accompanying drawings,
hereinafter will now be discussed one embodiment of sheet piling with asymmetric Z-section
and the use thereof in the manufacture of sheet piling.
Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic top plan view of a part of a retaining wall which is built
up from known symmetrical Z-section piles;
Fig. 2 is an elevational view according to Fig. 1, with U-section piles;
Fig. 3 is a similar view with Ω-section piles;
Fig. 4 is an elevational view according to Fig. 1, with asymmetrical Z-section piles
according to the invention;
Fig. 5 is a front view of a detail of a retaining wall made from sheet piles according
to the invention;
Fig. 6 is a top plan view of the retainig wall according to Fig. 5; and
Fig. 7 is an enlarged side elevational view taken on the line VII-VII of Fig. 5.
[0020] Referring to Figs. 1-4, a retaining wall is built up from piles 1 provided at the
side edges with hooks 2,3 which interlock in the manner indicated to form a lock together
for laterally coupling together the sheet piles. Each sheet pile 1 in principle comprises
an intermediate portion 4 and two flanges 5 and 6, adjoining thereto on opposite sides.
In the Z- and U-section forms of Figs. 1, 2, and 4, the hooks are provided directly
at the end edges of the flanges 5 and 6. In the Ω-section form of Fig. 3, adjoining
to flanges 5 and 6 are end portions 7 and 8 formed with hooks 2 and 3.
[0021] In the retaining wall according to Fig. 2, successive piles 1 have been rotated through
180° about their longitudinal axis, relative to the preceding pile. In the wall according
to Fig. 3, successive piles are of the same orientation. The neutral line, i.e. the
line which is subject neither to tensile load nor to pressure load in the case of
bending load B on the retaining wall in the plane of the drawing (see Fig. 2) is indicated
by N-N.
[0022] In Z-section piles it is customary first to join them in pairs in the manner indicated
by local welding and to drive the channel sections (Ω-sections) obtained thus into
the ground.
[0023] Fig. 1 illustrates the problem that is the basis for the invention. When anchoring
in the ground a retaining wall built up from symmetrical Z-sections 1 (which have
first been welded together pairwise to form Ω-sections) by means of ground anchors
9, it is requisite that the base plate 10 of the anchor seat 11 can be welded against
a flat part (the channel bottom 12) of a sheet pile. It is impossible for this plate
10 to be seated against the bottom of the channel 12 of the corresponding sheet piles,
formed by the two flanges 6, because the lock 2/3 projects from the middle of the
bottom 6+6. In order to provide a flat support surface, either the lock 2/3 must be
burnt away locally or the space on opposite sides of the lock must be filled up by
means of filler plates 13, which is cumbersome and expensive.
[0024] By forming, in accordance with the invention, as shown in Fig. 4, the Z-section piles
asymmetrically, with the inclined intermediate portion off the centre of the pile
1, i.e. the flanges 5 and 6 are of different lengths, the lock 2/3 will be located
laterally of the axis H-H and, on the side of the lock there will be enough space
on the channel bottom 12 for an anchor seat 11.
[0025] Figs. 5 and 6, respectively, show a front view and a top plan view of the anchorage
of a retaining wall which is built up from asymmmetrical piles 1 according to the
invention and also show the conventional purlin 13, i.e. the transverse bracing. Fig.
6 further shows a grout ball 14.
[0026] Fig. 7 shows in more detail the connection of the anchor seat 11 to the bottom of
a pile channel 12 and concentric tubes 15 through which extends the anchor rod 9.
1. A method of making sheet piling, wherein Ω-section sheet piles made from pairs of
Z-section sheet piles (1) previously welded together are driven or vibrated into the
ground successively or in groups and wherein adjoining Ω-sheet piles interlock through
the hooks (2,3) extending throughout the length of their free edges, characterized
in that for making the Ω-section sheet piles (1+1) use is made of Z-section sheet
piles (1) with the inclined intermediate portion (4) thereof located off the centre
of the pile.
2. A sheet pile for use in the method according to claim 1, provided with a Z-shaped
pile section, i.e. a pile made from steel through hot rolling or cold formation, having
a sectional form which is composed of two parallel end flanges (5,6) joined by an
inclined intermediate portion (4), the two flanges being provided with a hook (2,3)
at their free end, characterized in that the inclined intermediate portion (4) is
located off the centre of the pile (1), so that in a Ω-section pile composed of two
of said Z-section piles, wherein one pile has been rotated through 180° about its
longitudinal axis relative to the other pile, for the purpose of positioning an anchor
plate (10), the lock (2/3) connecting the two Z-section piles (1), is displaced laterally
relative to the axis (H-H) of the channel bottom (12).