1. Loose or Fractured Soil (Lime-Soil) Piles
Issue: Uneven backfilling in pile holes leads to insufficient compaction, varying density, loose pile bodies, or even fractures.
Solutions:
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Strictly control compaction quality during backfilling. Increase the number of compaction cycles if necessary.
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If the whole wall collapses, stop backfilling, remove the collapsed material, pour C10 concrete into the affected area, and resume compaction.
2. Necking in Gravel Compaction Piles
Issue: Localized reduction in pile diameter, commonly occurring in water-saturated cohesive soils.
Solutions:
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Control extraction speed at 0.8–1.5 m/min (adjust based on geology). Pause every 0.5–1.0 m and vibrate in place for 10–30 seconds.
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Use reverse insertion methods:
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Localized reverse insertion: Insert 1 m deeper at the affected section.
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Full-length reverse insertion: Extract 1 m, reinsert fully, then alternate 1 m extraction with 0.5 m reinsertion.
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Redrilling:
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Local redrilling: Redrill 1 m beyond the affected zone.
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Full redrilling: Repeat the entire process, ensuring original depth and material volume.
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3. Insufficient Gravel Filling in Compaction Piles
Issue: Actual gravel volume falls below design requirements.
Solutions:
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Use precast concrete pile tips to prevent movable tip jamming and increase fill volume.
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Inject pressurized water (0.2–0.4 MPa) during filling to reduce friction and improve flow.
4. Fractures in Precast Piles
Issue: Sudden tilting or misalignment during driving, increasing penetration without soil variation, followed by rebound.
Solutions:
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Collaborate with designers to determine remediation, typically adding supplemental piles (1–2 extra piles on either side of the axis).
5. Failure to Reach Design Depth in Precast Piles
Issue: Inability to meet target penetration depth or elevation.
Solutions:
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For hard layers, use pile planting, water jetting, or air blowing, ensuring the tip penetrates undisturbed soil by 6× pile diameter.
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Replace with a higher-energy hammer and thicker cushioning.
6. Precast Pile Tilting
Issue: Excessive vertical deviation.
Solutions:
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Clear underground obstructions (verify via probe testing). Avoid using bent or misaligned piles. Limit the slenderness ratio to <30.
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Ensure vertical alignment during driving. Replace worn pile cushions.
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Maintain flat contact surfaces between pile caps and piles.
7. Excessive Loose Soil in Dry-Hole Bored Piles
Issue: Post-drilling loose soil exceeds 100 mm.
Solutions:
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Perform multiple drilling cycles at the same depth with rotation and static extraction.
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Remove loose soil with spoon drills.
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For sandy soils, mix the slurry at the base before concreting.
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Apply pressure grouting, concrete injection, or compaction at the base.
8. Poor Concrete Quality in Dry-Hole Bored Piles
Issue: Honeycombing, voids, soil inclusion, or uneven gradation.
Solutions:
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For minor defects, widen the cap beam.
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For severe cases, add supplemental piles in consultation with designers.
9. Fractures in Wet-Hole Bored Piles
Issue: Soil inclusion in mid-sections due to concrete interruption.
Solutions:
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Unblocking the conduit: Use a heavy object to clear clogged concrete or flush with high-pressure water. Reinsert the conduit below the fracture before resuming pouring.
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Above-water fractures: Dewater, expose rebar, clean the surface, and continue concreting (for piles >1 m diameter).
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Below-water fractures: Drill a smaller adjacent hole past the fracture, add a rebar cage, and repour.
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Conduit-rebar entanglement: Rotate to detach or abandon the conduit if deeply embedded.
10. Necking in Cased Hole Piles
Issue: Diameter reduction in waterlogged or cohesive soils.
Solutions:
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For soft soils, redrill.
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Use precast pile tips + reverse insertion for other soils, or place a reinforced concrete section at the neck.
11. Concrete Refusal in Blast-Expanded Piles
Issue: Post-blast concrete fails to drop (“bottlenecking”).
Solutions:
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Insert steel/plastic pipes for venting or use vibrators.
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For setting concrete, drill a new hole in the cavity, add explosives, and repour.
12. Necking in Blast-Expanded Piles
Issue: Localized diameter shrinkage.
Solutions:
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For minor cases, manually remove the soil and repour.
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For severe cases, redrill or use controlled blasting.
