Caisson Inter-Ring Torsional Interface

The castellated dog-clutch joints between adjacent caisson rings — torque transmission for skin-friction-breaking rotation, with concrete-on-concrete shock detailing.

Memo13 — Platform
AuthorBrett Murrell
Versionv1.1 (Pre-Feasibility, ±25% accuracy)
Date17 May 2026
PatentP#1 (Caisson Foundation Architecture)
Word count~3,800
The MMC modular ring caisson stack must rotate as a single torsionally-coupled column during drilling, with the surface caisson-rotation arrangement applying continuous torque to the top of the stack and the whole 22 m column rotating in step to break skin friction at the soil-caisson interface and allow the cutter head to advance. This memo addresses the horizontal joint design between adjacent precast concrete caisson rings that delivers that torsional coupling — the inter-ring castellated dog-clutch interface. The estimated torsional demand at the joint is approximately 17-28 MNm under typical corridor strata, transmitted continuously and predominantly unidirectionally with occasional reversal for stuck-condition recovery, across the full drilling phase (4-12 hours per foundation). Standard friction-fit, steel-dowel, or smooth-shear-key joints will not survive this duty. The recommended design is a heavy-duty mechanical interlock — massive integral concrete castellations on the top and bottom faces of each 1.8 m ring (8-12 teeth per ring, approximately 400 mm wide × 300 mm deep), turning the 12-ring stack into a continuous 4.0 m diameter dog clutch. The vulnerabilities of subjecting concrete to repeated rotational shear and shock loading — stress concentration at tooth roots, impact crushing of mating faces, cam-out under any draft angle, diagonal shear failure under high local stress — are addressed by four specific design mitigations: radiused fillet roots at every tooth transition, elastomeric torque shims on the vertical bearing faces, zero-draft mating geometry, and dense closed-loop confinement reinforcement around each tooth. The detailing leverages standard precast concrete production technology — the teeth are formed during casting via steel form-liners, the confinement spirals are cage-tied as part of normal reinforcement assembly — so the caisson rings remain manufacturable at megafactory scale with no specialist precast process. Importantly, the inter-ring interface is distinct from the cutter head bearing interface (Memo 12), which is bearing-only with no castellations; the cutter head receives its cutting torque via the centrally-mounted drill pipe and the Anchor receptacle, not via the caisson stack. The inter-ring castellated joints therefore handle skin-friction-breaking torque only, not cutting torque, which is a different load case from a classic deep-foundation drill-string but still substantial in magnitude and demanding of the engineering detailing set out below.
17-28 MNmEstimated skin-friction-breaking torque at each inter-ring joint (typical corridor strata)
8-12 teethCastellations per ring face, formed during precast manufacture
400 × 300 mmTypical tooth dimensions (width × depth into ring face)
4.0 mInter-ring dog-clutch diameter (full caisson OD)

1. Purpose and Scope

This memo details the structural design and load-path engineering for the horizontal joints between adjacent 4.0 m diameter precast concrete caisson rings within the MMC Modular Ring Caisson Foundation System (Memo 3). It addresses the requirement that the 12-ring, 22 m caisson stack act as a single torsionally-coupled column during drilling — capable of transmitting the surface caisson-rotation torque down the full length of the stack to break skin friction at the soil-caisson interface and allow continuous advancement.

The architectural context is critical. Under the MMC drilling architecture set out in Memo 12 (Foundation Load Transfer Interface), cutting torque is not transmitted through the caisson stack. The cutter head receives its cutting torque directly from the surface dual-action top drive via a centrally-mounted drill pipe that locks into the Anchor receptacle at the centre of the cutter head. The caisson stack therefore does not see cutting reaction loads.

What the caisson stack does see is the torque needed to overcome skin friction at the outer caisson surface. As the cutter head advances downward into the ground, the caisson follows it down. For the caisson to descend, the cylindrical contact surface between the caisson outer wall and the surrounding ground must be put into rotational shear — the caisson spins, the ground around it experiences shear failure at the interface, friction transitions from static to kinetic, and the caisson can advance under the combined gravity load and ram thrust without becoming wedged.

The skin-friction-breaking torque is delivered by a separate surface arrangement that grips the top of the caisson stack and rotates it independently from the drill pipe. The two systems — drill pipe for cutting torque, caisson rotation for skin-friction-breaking — operate concurrently and at different RPMs throughout drilling. The inter-ring joints between caisson rings transmit only the latter.

The remainder of this memo sets out the torsional demand at the inter-ring joint, the recommended castellated dog-clutch geometry, the four specific engineering mitigations required to deliver concrete-on-concrete joints that survive the duty cycle, and the integration with megafactory precast production.

2. Operational Context — The Skin-Friction-Breaking Load Case

2.1 Why the Caisson Rotates During Drilling

The caisson stack cannot simply be pushed downward against the developing skin friction. Static skin friction in mixed corridor strata is large enough to fully resist the available WOB at depths beyond approximately 8-10 m — the stack would lock in place and cease to advance, regardless of how hard the surface rams pushed.

The standard oilfield and TBM response to this challenge is to rotate the casing or caisson continuously during advancement, putting the soil-casing interface into a state of kinetic (rather than static) friction. Kinetic friction at this interface is typically 30-50% lower than static friction, the soil immediately adjacent to the casing remoulds at the shear plane, and the casing can advance under available WOB.

The MMC modular ring caisson adopts the same principle. The caisson stack rotates continuously during drilling at low RPM (typically 1-5 rpm) — slower than the drill pipe (2-15 rpm), driven by a separate surface caisson-rotation arrangement, and operating concurrently with the drill pipe’s cutting torque delivery.

2.2 Estimating the Skin Friction Torque

For preliminary design, the skin-friction torque demand at the inter-ring joint can be estimated from the developed caisson surface area, the typical lateral pressure × friction coefficient at the interface, and the moment arm to the caisson centreline:

For preliminary design the joint is sized for the upper bound of approximately 30 MNm, with the typical operating load around 15-20 MNm through most of the drilling phase. Peak transient values up to approximately 40 MNm may occur briefly during stuck-condition recovery or initial breakout from a stationary stack.

2.3 Cyclic Stress Profile at the Tooth

While the macroscopic torque on the stack is predominantly unidirectional during drilling (caisson rotated one way to keep skin friction broken and advancement continuing), the stress at each individual castellation tooth is cyclic — every full rotation of the caisson, each tooth passes through the loading cycle of:

  1. Engagement build-up as the tooth contacts the adjacent ring’s matching face
  2. Peak load while transmitting the torsional shear
  3. Relief as the loading face passes
  4. Idle while the tooth is not in primary load transfer

This cyclic stress profile, repeated thousands of times across the drilling phase, is what makes radiused roots and elastomeric shims essential — without them, fatigue and impact crushing accumulate damage rapidly even though the macroscopic loading is "smooth."

In addition, transient stuck-condition recovery may require reversing the caisson rotation to free the stack. Reversal is not a routine drilling load case but is part of the operational envelope and must be handled by the joint design.

3. Recommended Design — The Castellated Dog Clutch

To transmit the torsional demand identified in §2, each inter-ring joint is designed as a heavy-duty mechanical interlock — massive integral concrete castellations on the top and bottom faces of each 1.8 m ring, forming a 4.0 m diameter dog clutch between adjacent rings.

3.1 Preliminary Geometry

Parameter Value Notes
Number of teeth per ring face 8 – 12 Equally spaced around the 4.0 m circumference; 10 teeth typical
Tooth angular pitch (10 teeth) 36° Centre-to-centre
Tooth width (radial) 400 mm Approximately full caisson wall thickness
Tooth depth (axial, into ring face) 300 mm Engagement depth
Tooth height (axial protrusion above ring face) 300 mm Matching the engagement depth above
Total castellation contact area, per joint ~0.96 m² 10 teeth × 400 × 300 mm vertical face area × 2 faces engaged per pair
Torsional capacity at concrete bearing stress 10 MPa ~38 MNm Vs ~30 MNm peak design demand — FS ~1.3
Torsional capacity at concrete bearing stress with confined design 20 MPa ~76 MNm FS ~2.5

3.2 Load Distribution Through the Tooth System

The massive surface area distributed across 10 teeth keeps localised face-to-face bearing stress comfortably below the 50 MPa concrete capacity. Each tooth carries approximately 1/10 of the total transmitted torque, with the bearing face area sized so that the per-tooth bearing stress under peak torque is below the AS 3600 confined bearing capacity.

The torsional load path through the joint is:


Upper caisson ring body
    ↓
Internal vertical ribs (continuous spline drive through reinforced concrete)
    ↓
Upper face castellation teeth (radial walls)
    ↓
Elastomeric torque shim layer (shock absorption + load distribution)
    ↓
Lower ring upper-face castellation teeth (mating engagement)
    ↓
Lower ring internal vertical ribs
    ↓
Continues to next inter-ring joint below

The internal vertical ribs are an integral part of each ring’s reinforcement cage — continuous from the upper face castellations to the lower face castellations, ensuring that the torsional load path is direct through the body of the ring rather than relying on the concrete matrix to redistribute load between the upper and lower face teeth.

4. Engineering Mitigations — Surviving Concrete-on-Concrete Cyclic Shear

Concrete-on-concrete castellated joints under cyclic torsional shear and shock loading would fail rapidly if simply cast and stacked. Four specific design mitigations are required, each addressing a distinct failure mode.

4.1 Stress Concentration at Tooth Roots — Radiused (Scalloped) Roots

Risk: Sharp 90-degree internal corners at the base of each castellation act as stress risers. Under cyclic torsional load, micro-fractures initiate at the corners, propagate inward, and eventually cause the tooth to shear off at its root.

Mitigation: All transitions between the castellation teeth and the main body of the ring shall feature generous sweeping fillets (typical radius 50-75 mm) at every internal corner. The fillets diffuse torsional stress concentration across a larger volume of concrete and significantly extend fatigue life under cyclic loading.

Manufacturing impact: The radii are formed during precast manufacture by appropriately profiled steel form-liners. No additional manufacturing process is required — the form-liner profile is the only change from a standard rectangular tooth.

4.2 Impact Crushing of Mating Faces — Elastomeric Torque Shims

Risk: Even with careful manufacturing tolerances, two concrete faces are never perfectly flush. When the joint engages under torsional load, microscopic high points on the two faces meet first and concentrate the entire local load on a fraction of the intended bearing area. Multi-meganewton local force on a few square centimetres causes the concrete to crush and spall, progressively damaging the bearing geometry over the drilling phase.

Mitigation: A heavy-duty compressible elastomeric pad or ductile metal gasket shall be affixed to the vertical bearing faces of the castellations during ring stacking. The shim:

Material selection: A high-durometer reinforced elastomer (shore-A 90-95 with internal steel banding) is the preferred baseline. Material selection requires verification under simulated drilling-fluid environment (refer §6 for next-step testing) to confirm compatibility with the mud chemistry across the drilling-phase service life.

Manufacturing/install impact: The shims are field-installed during ring stacking — they are a separate consumable component, not part of the precast ring itself. This keeps the ring manufacturing process unchanged and allows shims to be replaced or upgraded without requiring new precast tooling.

4.3 Cam-Out (Jacking) Effect — Zero-Draft Faces and WOB Clamp

Risk: If the vertical faces of the teeth have any draft angle (i.e. trapezoidal cross-section, even a few degrees off vertical), the rotational torque acts on the ramp as a vertical lifting force. Over the duration of drilling, this would progressively lift the upper rings off the lower rings, separating the stack from the inside.

Mitigation (geometric): The mating faces of each castellation tooth shall be manufactured to zero draft — perfectly vertical, with manufacturing tolerance maintained at ≤0.5° from vertical. The form-liners used in precast manufacture must be precisely vertical, and quality control must verify the tooth face angle on every ring face.

Mitigation (operational): The continuous compressive WOB applied to the caisson stack — ranging from near-zero (drill pipe lifting caisson) to 8.2 MN (rams maximum, refer Memo 12 §3) — acts as a continuous mechanical clamp that holds the rings together against any residual vertical separation force. As long as net WOB at the bearing is positive (compressive), the stack cannot lift apart even if minor manufacturing draft is present.

The combination of zero-draft tooth faces and continuous compressive WOB clamp gives a redundant fail-safe against stack separation during drilling.

4.4 Diagonal Shear Failure — Closed-Loop Confinement Reinforcement

Risk: The concrete matrix alone cannot handle the diagonal tension generated by torsional shear concentrated at the tooth root and across the tooth body. Under repeated cyclic loading, diagonal cracking propagates through the tooth and eventually causes shear tear-out failure (the tooth shears off as a wedge from the ring face).

Mitigation: The internal reinforcement cage inside each castellation tooth must include dense closed-loop confinement ties (N16 or N20 closed stirrups at 75-100 mm centres) engineered specifically to resist diagonal tension and prevent shear tear-out. Standard vertical reinforcement alone is insufficient — the closed loops provide the multi-axis confinement that contains the diagonal cracking mode.

Manufacturing impact: The confinement cages are part of the steel reinforcement assembly tied prior to casting. Each tooth has its own dedicated reinforcement sub-cage that is integrated into the main ring cage. The detailing is more intensive than a standard precast ring but is well within megafactory production capability — the production sequence is unchanged, only the rebar cage complexity increases.

5. Integration with Megafactory Production

The detailing requirements set out in §3 and §4 are deliberately within the envelope of standard precast concrete production technology, so that the caisson rings remain manufacturable at megafactory scale (refer Memo 15 for the megafactory production process) with no specialist precast process required:

The only field-installed components are the elastomeric shims (between rings) and the cutter head (at the bottom of the stack). Everything else is delivered to site as a finished precast unit, ready for direct stacking.

The lead caisson ring (lowermost in the stack, contacting the cutter head) is a slightly different production article — it carries the embedded bearing ring per Memo 12 §6.2 and the additional bottom-zone reinforcement. The remaining 11 rings in each foundation stack are identical castellated units.

6. Recommendations and Next Steps

Adopt as baseline design. The castellated dog-clutch geometry set out in §3 and the four engineering mitigations set out in §4 should be adopted as the baseline inter-ring joint design for all MMC modular ring caisson foundations.

Detailed FEA verification. Full three-dimensional finite element analysis should be conducted during the detailed design phase, modelling:

Material selection — elastomeric torque shims. A focused material selection study is required for the torque shims, considering:

Full-scale joint mock-up testing. A full-scale (4.0 m diameter) inter-ring joint mock-up should be subjected to:

Integration verification. The inter-ring joint design must be verified for compatibility with:

7. Conclusion

The inter-ring castellated dog-clutch joint is the structurally correct approach for delivering skin-friction-breaking torque through the 22 m caisson stack to enable continuous advancement of the MMC modular ring caisson during single-pass drilling. The estimated torsional demand of up to approximately 30 MNm peak under typical Australian corridor strata is well within the capacity of the recommended geometry (8-12 teeth per face × 400 mm × 300 mm, FS ~2.5 with confined design), provided the four specific mitigations are incorporated:

These mitigations are within the envelope of standard precast concrete production technology and do not require a specialist precast process — the caisson rings remain mass-manufacturable at megafactory scale (refer Memo 15) with steel form-liners providing the tooth geometry and standard cage tying providing the confinement reinforcement.

The inter-ring interface is distinct from the cutter head bearing interface (Memo 12), which is bearing-only with no castellations. The two interfaces handle different loads — cutter head bearing handles compression; inter-ring joints handle skin-friction-breaking torque — and the two systems together with the central drill pipe / Anchor receptacle (Memo 12 §5.3) deliver the full mechanical functionality of the single-pass drilling architecture.

Because the caisson remains permanently in the ground after drilling is complete, the inter-ring castellated joints also provide perfect rotational and axial alignment of all 12 rings for the post-drilling sequence — Anchor installation, pre-tensioning, and grouting (refer Memo 17). The mechanical interlock that handled torsional shear during drilling becomes the permanent geometric registration of the rings in service.

The inter-ring castellated dog-clutch joint design is structurally sound, manufacturable at scale, and architecturally consistent with the broader MMC drilling system. The four engineering mitigations are essential for survival of the duty cycle and must be included in any production caisson ring specification.