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CIE435
Foundation Engineering
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General
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3 credits, Fall Semester Required (CIE Fall
senior year) Technical Elective (ENV Fall) Three 50-minute lectures
(or equivalent) per week |
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Recent Instructor(s)
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Dr. Rowland Richards Jr., (Fall 2001, Fall
2002) (716) 645-2114 ext.2417
Dr. Prasanta Banerjee (Fall 2003)
(716) 645-2114 ext. 2426
pkb@eng.buffalo.edu |
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URL
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None
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Prerequisite(s)
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CIE334
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Catalogue Description
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Application of soil
mechanics to engineering problems.
Soil exploration and sampling.
States of plastic equilibrium, bearing capacity, and
settlement of foundations. Foundation
design, spread footing, mat, raft, piles, and caissons.
Lateral earth pressures, retaining walls, braced excavations,
and slope stability.
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Course Objectives/Outcomes
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This course presents the application of the
fundamental concepts of soil mechanics and techniques for sampling
and soil exploration to design deep and shallow foundations, earth
slopes, and retaining structures. The emphasis is on utilizing the
basic principles of solid mechanics including seepage, limit
equilibrium and load-deformation characteristics to evaluate the
safety and serviceability of alternative designs within the
constraints of code provisions and economic feasibility. Specific
topics include isolated, strip and mat footing, rafts, different
types of piles, caissons, cotter dams, earth dams, bulkheads, braced
excavations, tunnels and buried pipe.
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Text(s)
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Principles of Foundation Engineering (2002 5th
Edition) Braja M Das, Thomson-Cole,
ISBNO-534-40752-8
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Outcomes (ABET a-k)
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c, e
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Outcomes (CIE)
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2, 3, 5
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Outcomes (ENV)
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8
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Other information
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Review by Undergraduate Studies Committee
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October 22, 2002
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Prepared by
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Dr. Alan J. Rabideau/Dr. Rowland Richards Jr.,
(Nov-02)
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Back
to Course Summaries
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