Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees

Tree-pulling experiments were conducted in Singapore involving 20 rain trees (Samanea saman) growing in four different soil types (1) structural soil with 80% granite chips and 20% sandy loam soil, (2) structural soil with 50% granite chips and 50% sandy loam soil, (3) in situ soil and (4) top soil....

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Main Authors: Harnas, F. R., Sahadewa, A., Sim, E. K., Ow, Lai Fern, Indrawan, I. Gde Budi, Rahardjo, Harianto, Leong, Eng Choon, Fong, Yok-King, Tan, Puay-Yok
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94411
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/7385
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author Harnas, F. R.
Sahadewa, A.
Sim, E. K.
Ow, Lai Fern
Indrawan, I. Gde Budi
Rahardjo, Harianto
Leong, Eng Choon
Fong, Yok-King
Tan, Puay-Yok
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Harnas, F. R.
Sahadewa, A.
Sim, E. K.
Ow, Lai Fern
Indrawan, I. Gde Budi
Rahardjo, Harianto
Leong, Eng Choon
Fong, Yok-King
Tan, Puay-Yok
author_sort Harnas, F. R.
collection NTU
description Tree-pulling experiments were conducted in Singapore involving 20 rain trees (Samanea saman) growing in four different soil types (1) structural soil with 80% granite chips and 20% sandy loam soil, (2) structural soil with 50% granite chips and 50% sandy loam soil, (3) in situ soil and (4) top soil. The trees were pulled over with a winch attached to the stem at a standard height of 1.3 m and the force required to uproot or break the trees were recorded. The physical above and below ground characteristics of the trees were also measured. All 20 trees in this study failed via uprooting without any stem fracture. Analysis of the data showed that the maximum resistive bending moment (BMmax) was positively correlated with the overall size of the root plate, the size (diameter) of the individual roots and the extent of crown spread. The dry mass of crown was significantly greater in the 80:20 structural soil treatment while no significant difference was found between the other soil types. The trunk diameter was not significantly different between treatments. Significant differences were observed in the depth of root plates where those grown in top soil had significantly deeper root plates as opposed to the other treatments but though deeper, the vast majority of trees planted in top soil exhibited fibrous rather than structural roots. The cross-sectional area of roots which is indicative of the size of the individual roots showed a significantly greater value in the 80:20 structural treatment while the 50:50 structural and top soil treatments had the lowest values. Significant differences in BMmax were only observed in the in situ soil type while the rest of the planting substrates exhibited values that were comparable and not significantly different.
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spelling ntu-10356/944112020-03-07T11:43:42Z Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees Harnas, F. R. Sahadewa, A. Sim, E. K. Ow, Lai Fern Indrawan, I. Gde Budi Rahardjo, Harianto Leong, Eng Choon Fong, Yok-King Tan, Puay-Yok School of Civil and Environmental Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical Tree-pulling experiments were conducted in Singapore involving 20 rain trees (Samanea saman) growing in four different soil types (1) structural soil with 80% granite chips and 20% sandy loam soil, (2) structural soil with 50% granite chips and 50% sandy loam soil, (3) in situ soil and (4) top soil. The trees were pulled over with a winch attached to the stem at a standard height of 1.3 m and the force required to uproot or break the trees were recorded. The physical above and below ground characteristics of the trees were also measured. All 20 trees in this study failed via uprooting without any stem fracture. Analysis of the data showed that the maximum resistive bending moment (BMmax) was positively correlated with the overall size of the root plate, the size (diameter) of the individual roots and the extent of crown spread. The dry mass of crown was significantly greater in the 80:20 structural soil treatment while no significant difference was found between the other soil types. The trunk diameter was not significantly different between treatments. Significant differences were observed in the depth of root plates where those grown in top soil had significantly deeper root plates as opposed to the other treatments but though deeper, the vast majority of trees planted in top soil exhibited fibrous rather than structural roots. The cross-sectional area of roots which is indicative of the size of the individual roots showed a significantly greater value in the 80:20 structural treatment while the 50:50 structural and top soil treatments had the lowest values. Significant differences in BMmax were only observed in the in situ soil type while the rest of the planting substrates exhibited values that were comparable and not significantly different. Accepted version 2011-12-09T06:50:34Z 2019-12-06T18:55:34Z 2011-12-09T06:50:34Z 2019-12-06T18:55:34Z 2010 2010 Journal Article Ow, L. F., Harnas, F. R., Indrawan, I. G. B., Sahadewa, A., Sim, E. K., Rahardjo, H., et. al. (2010). Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees. Trees - structure and function, 24(6), 1007–1015. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94411 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/7385 10.1007/s00468-010-0470-5 en Trees - structure and function © 2010 Springer
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical
Harnas, F. R.
Sahadewa, A.
Sim, E. K.
Ow, Lai Fern
Indrawan, I. Gde Budi
Rahardjo, Harianto
Leong, Eng Choon
Fong, Yok-King
Tan, Puay-Yok
Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees
title Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees
title_full Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees
title_fullStr Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees
title_full_unstemmed Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees
title_short Tree-pulling experiment : an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees
title_sort tree pulling experiment an analysis into the mechanical stability of rain trees
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94411
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/7385
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