A pile is considered tall when it exceeds 70 m. The slenderness, the ratio of the maximum diameter of the shaft to the height of the pile, is generally less than or equal to 1/10°. The compression exerted at the base of the pile is accentuated both by the weight of the pile itself and by the weight of the supported deck, as tall height generally combines, for architectural reasons, with long span. Therefore, this is a logical and sometimes privileged area for the use of high-performance concrete.
Used concrete High-performance concretes are manufactured by reducing the
porosity of the concrete, which means reducing the ratio E/C of the mass of water to that of cement per 1 m³ of concrete. An E/C ratio below 0.4 generally corresponds, with common cements, to the domain of HPC (the strength then exceeds 50 MPa). In practice, to overcome the decrease in workability of the concrete due to low E/C ratios,
superplasticizers are used to deflocculate the fines (cement, mineral additions, ultra-fines). The composition of the HPC80 concrete used for the Elorn Bridge was as follows: • Saint-Vigor CPA HP PM cement: 150 kg/m³ • Saint-Renan 0/4
sand: 744 kg/m³ • Kerguillo 4/10
gravel: 423 kg/m³ • Kerguillo 10/16
gravel: 634 kg/m³ • Silica fume (8%): 36 kg/m³ • Plasticizer (3.95%): 18 kg/m³ • Setting retarder: 1.6 kg/m³ • Water (E/C ratio = 0.32): 132 kg/m³
Construction method Two construction methods can be used to build tall piers: • Climbing or self-climbing
formwork is the most commonly used method in France. The formwork relies on the already concreted part to rise to a determined height. However, concrete resumption is necessary each time the concreting is stopped. The piers of the
Millau Viaduct and the
Verrières Viaduct were built using this method. • Sliding formwork consists of continuously moving a formwork at a speed between 10 and 30 cm per hour. This technique avoids concrete resumption. The
Tsing Ma Bridge (1997) in Hong Kong, the Skarnsundet Bridge (1991), or the Helgeland Bridge (1990) in Norway were built using this method.
The world's tallest piers Structures with the tallest piers in the world are concentrated in Europe, specifically in France, Germany, and Austria. The first of these is the
Millau Viaduct, which has the tallest pier in the world and two others in the top nine. The list of the fifteen tallest piers is as follows. == See also ==