Statistical Characterization of Cone Penetration Test Variability for Ibis Hotel Soil
Abstract
Geotechnical variability is a complex attribute that results from
many disparate sources of uncertainties. It is strongly dependent on the
properties of the soil beneath and adjacent to the structure of interest.
Probabilistic models began more realistic design compare to the old
deterministic design as it can describe and take account of soil variability.
Although the deterministic approach is widely used, it is well known, that
almost all natural soils are spatially variable in their properties and rarely
homogenous. This paper focuses on the preliminary analysis to prepare the
probabilistic analysis of Pile Foundation design by characterizing the tip
resistance dan sleeve friction for 6 CPTs data taken from Ibis Hotel
Surakarta. It involves an extensive analysis to perform the best-fit
distribution of pointwise variability of tip resistance and sleeve friction using
computer program written in MATLAB and FORTRAN. Finally, the point
statistics (i.e. mean, standard deviation, and coefficient of variation) across
the site were derived together with the interpretation of the possibility of the
existence of different materials. The results show that, there is no objection
to the hypothesis of normality in the chi-square analysis, although the best fit
distribution for each profile or 6 profiles which collected at once are varying
(i.e.normal, log-normal, gamma, beta. When all tip resistance data are
collected at once, the mean and standard deviation is 42.02 kg/cm2 and 40
kg/cm2 respectively. The mean and standard deviation of all sleeve friction
data is 1.02 kg/cm2 and 0.8 kg/cm2 respectively. The coefficient of variation
of tip resistance and sleeve friction tend to be skewed as its value is high (i.e.
0.95 and 0.78 respectivel).