{"title":"Effect of Sample Preparation on Saturated and Unsaturated Shear Strength of Cohesionless Soils","authors":"I. Akram, S. Azam","doi":"10.3390/geotechnics3020013","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The geotechnical behavior of cohesionless soils is governed by field conditions. Such soils exist in two distinct forms, namely: disintegrated, such as fresh sediments under no overburden and/or no suction, and intact, such as old deposits with overburden and/or suction. The main contribution of this research was the successful capture of field conditions in laboratory samples, and the determination of shear strength under saturated and dried states. Results indicated that disintegrated samples possess identical soil behavior under both saturation states. Shear stiffness and peak shear increased with increasing normal stress, and no clear failure peaks were observed, similar to loose soils. Both samples showed an initial contraction followed by dilation at low normal stresses and mostly contraction at high normal stresses. Apparent cohesion was non-existent, and the friction angle measured 44.5° in the saturated state and 48° in the dried state. The intact sample exhibited behavior similar to the disintegrated sample when saturated. Under the dried state, clear failure peaks followed by residual shear were observed, similar to dense soils. Soil response was primarily dilative at low normal stresses and largely contractive under high normal stresses. Apparent cohesion was zero, and friction angle was 42° in the saturated state and changed to 91 kPa and 36°, respectively, in the dried state. Finally, structural cohesion increased with normal stress, and the friction angle due to suction was between 0.05° and 0.02°.","PeriodicalId":11823,"journal":{"name":"Environmental geotechnics","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environmental geotechnics","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3390/geotechnics3020013","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, GEOLOGICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
The geotechnical behavior of cohesionless soils is governed by field conditions. Such soils exist in two distinct forms, namely: disintegrated, such as fresh sediments under no overburden and/or no suction, and intact, such as old deposits with overburden and/or suction. The main contribution of this research was the successful capture of field conditions in laboratory samples, and the determination of shear strength under saturated and dried states. Results indicated that disintegrated samples possess identical soil behavior under both saturation states. Shear stiffness and peak shear increased with increasing normal stress, and no clear failure peaks were observed, similar to loose soils. Both samples showed an initial contraction followed by dilation at low normal stresses and mostly contraction at high normal stresses. Apparent cohesion was non-existent, and the friction angle measured 44.5° in the saturated state and 48° in the dried state. The intact sample exhibited behavior similar to the disintegrated sample when saturated. Under the dried state, clear failure peaks followed by residual shear were observed, similar to dense soils. Soil response was primarily dilative at low normal stresses and largely contractive under high normal stresses. Apparent cohesion was zero, and friction angle was 42° in the saturated state and changed to 91 kPa and 36°, respectively, in the dried state. Finally, structural cohesion increased with normal stress, and the friction angle due to suction was between 0.05° and 0.02°.
期刊介绍:
In 21st century living, engineers and researchers need to deal with growing problems related to climate change, oil and water storage, handling, storage and disposal of toxic and hazardous wastes, remediation of contaminated sites, sustainable development and energy derived from the ground.
Environmental Geotechnics aims to disseminate knowledge and provides a fresh perspective regarding the basic concepts, theory, techniques and field applicability of innovative testing and analysis methodologies and engineering practices in geoenvironmental engineering.
The journal''s Editor in Chief is a Member of the Committee on Publication Ethics.
All relevant papers are carefully considered, vetted by a distinguished team of international experts and rapidly published. Full research papers, short communications and comprehensive review articles are published under the following broad subject categories:
geochemistry and geohydrology,
soil and rock physics, biological processes in soil, soil-atmosphere interaction,
electrical, electromagnetic and thermal characteristics of porous media,
waste management, utilization of wastes, multiphase science, landslide wasting,
soil and water conservation,
sensor development and applications,
the impact of climatic changes on geoenvironmental, geothermal/ground-source energy, carbon sequestration, oil and gas extraction techniques,
uncertainty, reliability and risk, monitoring and forensic geotechnics.